Tuesday, July 07, 2026

UN Condemns RSF Escalation Around El Obeid as Tasees Backs Ceasefire

07/07/2026 13:50 

EL OBEID / EL FASHER / GENEVA / CHAD

Sudanese refugees in Chad set up makeshift shelters (File photo: © UNHCR / Colin Delfosse)

The UN Human Rights Council has unanimously condemned the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) for escalating violence in and around El Obeid, warning that the North Kordofan capital faces a growing risk of mass atrocities, while the RSF-aligned Sudan Founding Alliance (Tasees) called for an immediate ceasefire and renewed political negotiations.

Speaking to Radio Dabanga, Tasees spokesperson Ahmed Tagad Lisan said lasting peace would require both the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the RSF to agree to an immediate ceasefire, a humanitarian truce and a political process.

He said humanitarian access must come first, adding that international resolutions alone would not end the conflict.

The Human Rights Council adopted the resolution by consensus on Monday amid growing concern that El Obeid could suffer atrocities like those committed in North Darfur’s capital of El Fasher.

The resolution condemns the RSF and allied forces for escalating attacks around the city and warns of an imminent risk of mass atrocities, including conflict-related sexual violence.

It also denounces attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, including reported drone strikes on hospitals, and condemns the use of starvation as a weapon of war through restrictions on aid, fuel and water.

The council called for an immediate ceasefire, unhindered humanitarian access, independent monitoring and investigations into alleged violations of international humanitarian and human rights law.

The United Kingdom sponsored the resolution alongside Ireland, Germany, the Netherlands and Norway after warning that RSF troop build-ups around El Obeid had sharply increased the risk of atrocities.

‘Sudan objects, analyst rejects RSF claims’

Sudan’s delegation objected to provisions allowing the UN Independent International Fact-Finding Mission to investigate alleged violations in El Obeid, arguing that the resolution placed the SAF and the RSF on an equal footing. The resolution nevertheless passed without opposition.

Tagad Lisan defended recent RSF drone strikes, claiming they targeted military sites rather than civilians. However, journalist and political analyst Qurashi Awad rejected that account, saying repeated RSF attacks had struck residential areas and caused heavy civilian casualties. He said the Human Rights Council’s intervention reflected the scale of suffering, particularly in El Fasher.

ICC pursues Darfur investigations

The International Criminal Court (ICC) Deputy Prosecutor Nazhat Shameem Khan is due to brief the UN Security Council on Darfur on Tuesday from Chad.

After visiting Farchana refugee camp, Khan said investigators had made significant progress in gathering evidence of crimes committed in El Fasher and El Geneina.

She said the ICC was building cases against both direct perpetrators and senior officials suspected of orchestrating atrocities, while continuing efforts to execute outstanding arrest warrants for former president Omar Al Bashir, Abdel Rahim Hussein and Ahmed Haroun.

New Report: RSF Training Camps, Supply Routes in Libya Fueling Sudan’s War — ‘What We’ve Uncovered is Really Just the Tip of the Iceberg’

 04/07/2026 01:32 

AMSTERDAM

An RSF militiaman poses in front of a vehicle in El Fasher (Photo: supplied) War& Conflict

Andrew Bergman interviews Klaas van Dijken, Director of Lighthouse Reports for  Radio Dabanga

The United Arab Emirates is widely accused of playing a key role in sustaining Sudan’s civil  war. But until now, little has been known about how that support is channelled through neighbouring countries. Lighthouse Reports director Klaas van Dijken explains how a months-long investigation uncovered evidence of a network of RSF  training camps in eastern Libya, the role of the UAE in sustaining the war in Sudan, and why he believes international pressure is urgently needed.

For a new investigation co-published last week by Lighthouse Reports, Evident and Sudan War Monitor Inside the Secret Network Fueling Sudan’s War, reporters travelled to eastern Libya to investigate the routes, facilities and infrastructure they say are being used to back the RSF in its nearly four-year conflict with the Sudanese Armed Forces, that is leaving what is widely termed the world’s most dire humanitarian crisis in its wake: thousands of Sudanese civilians dead from violence, disease, or starvation, millions of Sudanese displaced, or as refugees in neighbouring countries, and vast swaths of complete destruction. War& Conflict

Watch the complete interview here

Combining open-source analysis with reporting on the ground, the investigation presents new evidence about what it says is one of the UAE’s most significant operations supporting the RSF.

Speaking to Radio Dabanga, the director of Lighthouse Reports, Klaas van Dijken, fears the network documented by his team is “only the tip of the iceberg”. He says that UAE support routed through Libya is crucial to the RSF military campaign, which he believes would quickly collapse without.

The investigators say that they discovered five military training camps and staging sites, four of them were previously unknown. The camps, which span Northern and Southern Libya, are used to train RSF-members on heavy weaponry and new weapons which soldiers then transport back to Sudan.

RSF defectors and current soldiers along with Libyan National Army sources told the team these sites also provide the RSF with logistical support including fuel and pickup trucks, which are often modified for battle before being driven back to Sudan. War& Conflict

‘Long investigation’

Lighthouse Reports director Klaas van Dijken explains how a months-long investigation uncovered evidence of a network of RSF training camps in eastern Libya, the role of the UAE in sustaining the war in Sudan, and why he believes international pressure is urgently needed.

“It has been known for quite some time that the Rapid Support Forces were receiving support from the UAE, but the evidence was fairly limited. People knew weapons were moving through Chad and that aircraft were landing in neighbouring countries around Sudan, but very little was known about how that support actually worked on the ground.

A new investigation co-published last week by Lighthouse Reports, Evident and Sudan War Monitor Inside the Secret Network Fueling Sudan’s War, reporters travelled to eastern Libya to investigate the routes, facilities and infrastructure they say are being used to back the RSF in its nearly four-year conflict with the Sudanese Armed Forces, that is leaving what is widely termed the world’s most dire humanitarian crisis in its wake: thousands of Sudanese civilians dead from violence, disease, or starvation, millions of Sudanese displaced, or as refugees in neighbouring countries, and vast swaths of complete destruction.

Following the evidence

“The best example is what we discovered at Camp 17. We travelled to eastern Libya to investigate what was happening around Kufra, near the border triangle with Egypt and Sudan. While we were there, the Libyan National Army was watching us closely, making it difficult to speak to sensitive sources. The environment itself was also challenging, so we had to be extremely careful throughout.

“Later, in Benghazi, we spoke to RSF defectors who told us they had been trained at a camp outside the city. One of them helped us identify its location using Google Earth. We then combined satellite imagery with open-source information and confirmed that the camp existed and was still active. We saw vehicles consistent with those used by both the LNA and the RSF, as well as groups of people appearing to receive military  training. War& Conflict

‘Colombian mercenaries’

“We also confirmed that mobile phones originating from South America were active inside the camp, supporting the defectors’ accounts that Colombian mercenaries were providing training there. That’s an example of how we combined open-source intelligence, satellite imagery, and on-the-ground reporting.”

“The strongest evidence came from people’s testimony. What was unique was our access to RSF defectors, active military sources within the RSF and contacts on the LNA side. They consistently confirmed that these camps exist and remain active today.

“What surprised me most was just how widespread these facilities are and how closely the LNA and the RSF are working together. We identified four previously unknown training camps, but I believe there are many more that we were unable to verify. What we’ve uncovered is really just the tip of the iceberg. War& Conflict

“This is a major hub where the RSF trains fighters, assembles equipment and prepares forces to continue the war in Sudan.”

A message to the international community

“It’s well known that the LNA has longstanding ties with the UAE. The UAE supported Haftar during the war in Libya and is now using those same relationships to continue supporting both the LNA and the RSF. This network has become a crucial part of the RSF’s ability to sustain the conflict in Sudan.

“The first thing I hope comes from this investigation is greater pressure on the UAE to end its support for the RSF. One of the defectors says at the end of our documentary that if the UAE stopped providing support, the RSF would collapse very quickly because it is so heavily dependent on that assistance. War& Conflict

“I also want European governments to recognise the contradiction in their current approach. They are working with eastern Libya and Haftar to reduce migration to Europe while overlooking the role those same authorities are playing in prolonging a war that is creating even more refugees.

“The European Union, the United States and the United Kingdom all have leverage. They should use it to pressure not only the UAE but also other countries supporting Sudan’s warring parties. If they want greater peace and stability in the region, that is one of the most important steps they can take towards bringing this devastating war to an end.”

Explosions Reported Near Macron's Hotel in Damascus, Syria

By Al Mayadeen English

Explosions were reported in Damascus as French President Macron met Syrian President al-Sharaa, with officials saying Macron was unaffected.

Explosions rocked Damascus on Tuesday during French President Emmanuel Macron’s visit to Syria, with blasts heard near the hotel where he is staying, according to Reuters, citing a security source. The cause of the explosions remains unclear.

A witness told Reuters that explosions were heard in the Syrian capital, adding that the reasons behind the blasts were not immediately known. The reports emerged as Macron was visiting Damascus for meetings with Syrian officials, including self-appointed interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa.

According to the security source, a series of explosive devices detonated near the hotel where Macron is staying in Damascus.

Local Syrian sources separately reported an explosion at the headquarters of the Ministry of Tourism in Damascus, adding that injuries had been reported following the incident.

Macron meets al-Sharaa amid Damascus security reports

Meanwhile, Syrian news channel Al-Ikhbariyah reported that al-Sharaa was receiving Macron at the Presidential Palace while reports emerged of explosions heard across Damascus.

However, the Élysée Palace said Macron did not hear any explosions while on his way to meet al-Sharaa.

Details of the visit 

Macron arrived on Monday in the Syrian capital Damascus for a visit scheduled to last until Tuesday, during which he called for a “free and pluralistic” Syria that respects all its components.

Macron said from Damascus that he hopes Syria will play a role in easing regional tensions, stressing the need for a political framework that ensures inclusivity and representation for all segments of society.

Upon arrival at Damascus International Airport, Macron and his accompanying delegation were received by Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shaibani.

According to Syria’s Presidential Media Directorate, the visit aims to discuss ways to strengthen bilateral relations between Syria and France, as well as to address regional and international issues of mutual concern.

The White Helmets Invade Venezuela

Kit Klarenberg

Source: Al Mayadeen English

4 Jul 2026 01:12

White Helmets' deployment to Venezuela is portrayed as a humanitarian mission that also advances Western influence through parallel state-building and regime change.

On June 27th, a plane ferrying a “specialized” team of “highly trained search and rescue specialists” flew into Venezuela from Damascus. Dispatched at putative Syrian leader Ahmad al-Sharaa’s direct order, the 15-strong group is assisting disaster efforts launched by Caracas in response to devastating twin earthquakes. Among them are members of the notorious White Helmets. A bogus humanitarian group constructed by MI6, they played a central role in Britain’s protracted coup of Bashar Assad. Are the White Helmets similarly in Venezuela to assist regime change?

State news agency Sana enthusiastically promoted the White Helmets’ arrival, celebrating “Syria’s first overseas humanitarian search-and-rescue deployment in modern history.” The expedition reportedly represents a “significant step” in the country’s “evolving humanitarian role” globally, underscoring “its growing capacity to contribute to international disaster response efforts.” The deployment is explicitly intended to “position” Damascus “as a contributor to international humanitarian operations,” capable of dispatching “search-and-rescue expertise” overseas to support “other nations in times of crisis.” 

Sana highlighted the “exceptional field experience” of the White Helmets sent to Caracas, who reportedly acquired “advanced expertise in dealing with complex rubble and the extraction of trapped survivors” throughout the West’s dirty war against the now “deposed regime” of Assad. This “accumulated experience” has reportedly “enabled Syrian rescue specialists to participate in international emergency response missions,” with Venezuela being their debut. While Damascus provides “experienced rescue personnel,” key dirty war sponsor Qatar supplies “heavy machinery and specialized equipment required for field operations.”

The White Helmets will “work in close coordination” with international rescue units in shattered Caracas for up to 10 days, “with the possibility of extending the mission depending on operational requirements and developments on the ground.” An “operational requirement” of the rescuers may be assisting in the construction of quasi-state structures in Venezuela, ala Syria, ensuring Western powers have the requisite people, organisations and structures in place locally to take over when the embattled interim government of Delcy Rodríguez finally collapses.

As CNN has reported, “Rodríguez’s Venezuela is in such dire straits she can’t afford to reject aid from either friends or foes.” The White Helmets are a self-evident menace. The group was founded in 2014 by ARK, a shadowy British intelligence cutout founded by MI6 veteran Alistair Harris. Over the subsequent decade, operating in areas controlled by foreign-backed extremists, the White Helmets played a major propaganda role in the dirty conflict against Assad. 

Even more insidiously, the group and other ARK-created quasi-state structures shored up the dominance of Jabhat al-Nusra, which subsequently rebranded as Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham, before violently taking power in Damascus in December 2024. By providing state-like rescue services in HTS-occupied areas, the extremist faction’s credibility as a governance actor with local Syrians was significantly enhanced, to the extent HTS became “synonymous with opposition to Assad.” Leaked documents show British intelligence well-knew these activities assisted HTS’ “growing influence”, in the years leading up to Assad’s ouster.

Since then, the White Helmets have become Syria’s emergency services under al-Sharaa’s illegitimate rule. Meanwhile, fellow ARK construct the Free Syrian Police, with which the White Helmets worked hand-in-glove, has been anointed the country’s national police force. Separate leaks show this was Britain’s plan all along, with Damascus’ post-war “recovery” providing a beachhead for local MI6 assets to “[expand] into newly liberated territory” before all-out regime change. Responding to Venezuela’s cataclysmic earthquakes likewise represents a golden opportunity to finish the West’s long-running war on Chavismo. 

‘Extremist Groups’

Leaked British documents trace the White Helmets’ inception to a secret program launched July 2013. Once constructed, the so-called Syrian Civil Defence enabled “direct and public linkages between donor funding and support to the Syrian opposition,” while “[enhancing] the legitimacy of local governance actors.” The group had strong links to, and worked in intimate conjunction with, Western-backed extremist groups, and foreign-created anti-Assad civil society and media operations. The White Helmets were a perfect conduit for opaquely funnelling aid and financial assistance to opposition-occupied territory.

Fractured minds of a nation: Mental health and schooling in Lebanon - when learning becomes a battle for survival

Accordingly, the White Helmets were at the forefront of constructing parallel state structures, in advance of the day Assad was finally ousted. A leaked file refers to how in April 2015, ARK mobilised its networks of Syrian opposition actors of every stripe, including the White Helmets, to gather information at the British government’s request on “the situation in Idlib city following its liberation.” This included insights on “humanitarian conditions and service provision, as well as the evolving governance and security space.”

With British, Japanese and US funding, and in close coordination with the Qatari-created Syrian National Coalition, ARK sought “to galvanise international attention on the issue of protection of civilians,” while “mobilising social media, the international press, global advocacy partners and private entrepreneurs” to promote the White Helmets. In 2014, ARK produced a documentary about the White Helmets, Digging for Life, which racked up hundreds of thousands of views on YouTube and elevated the group to international stardom. 

In leaked files, ARK boasts about the “impact” such propaganda had within and without Syria. One film the intelligence cutout produced “on the indefatigable spirit of a struggling female protestor” prompted “the eruption of anti-regime protests” in Idlib in 2013 - “protestors chanted her name.” The same ARK staffer behind Digging for Life also produced a “documentary profile” of the Free Syrian Police. Like the White Helmets, the FSP was much-venerated by the Western media, and promoted by British intelligence via “posters, booklets and broadcast products.”

As with the White Helmets too, the reality of the FSP was considerably darker than what emerged in major news outlets - at least initially. From 2012 onwards, the force operated in close tandem with violent militant factions, and courts punishing residents of opposition-occupied territory under obscenely strict interpretations of Sharia Law. However, a March 2017 BBC profile of the FSP repeatedly stressed the force “does not co-operate with extremist groups,” while refusing to “carry weapons in order to administer law and order in the country.”

Nine months later, the FSP’s intimate relationships with multiple ultra-violent militant sects, including HTS's forerunner Jabhat al-Nusra, were publicly revealed. This extended to assisting in the execution of women who disobeyed al-Nusra’s theocratic codes. These disclosures led to the suspension of British funding for the FSP, but this was reinstated within mere weeks as the force’s sinister alliance with extremist elements was “already known” to the Foreign Office. Indeed, the FSP’s entire purpose was assisting HTS and affiliated armed cliques in unseating Assad.

‘Service Delivery’

When the FSP’s true nature was publicly exposed, management of the project had been passed to British intelligence cutout Adam Smith International. Leaked ASI files from 2016 refer to the necessity of the FSP and other British ‘humanitarian’ initiatives supplanting “pre-2011” Syrian institutions, as part of a wider “expansion into newly liberated territory.” The White Helmets, FSP et al could “take advantage of systems and structures already in place…[demonstrating] the continuity of service delivery by the opposition rather than the regime,” the documents state.

The FSP formally absorbing Assad-era security infrastructure ensured “consistency between emerging police forces across opposition Syria, facilitating their future integration at the right moment.” More generally, it “[prepared] Syrian institutions for a peace agreement and transition.” The FSP could “inform as well as respond to the political process” - in other words, regime change. Meanwhile, it was forecast that “presenting a functioning yet consistent model in Syria’s liberated areas will strengthen the opposition and be the basis for a new civilian-led and accountable state security architecture”:

“The shifting front lines of the Syrian conflict mean that the FSP…must be ready to respond quickly when new stations are needed within current frontlines or when territory changes hands.”

In January 2019, HTS took power outright in north-west Syria. Almost instantly, the FSP was formally dissolved, its members continuing their activities under the al-Nusra successor’s banner. Leaked documents testify to how HTS was “less likely to attack” British intelligence-created “moderate opposition” entities, including the White Helmets, which “demonstrably [provided] key services” to the local population. After all, residents of HTS-occupied territory increasingly supported the group, precisely due to “receiving services” under the extremist faction’s chaotic rule.

As British intelligence-conceived “moderate” service providers flourished under HTS, British intelligence cutouts produced slick propaganda for national and international dissemination, providing audiences with “compelling narratives and demonstrations of a credible alternative to the [Assad] regime.” A particular target were Syrians who may once have supported regime change in Damascus, but believed the “revolution is dead” in the wake of Assad declaring victory in December 2018, fighting effectively ceasing outright, and HTS- and Kurdish-dominated enclaves being left to their own devices.

Of course, the West’s insurrectionary assault on Syria was far from over. In lieu of kinetic conflict, brutal sanctions ensured what remained of the country’s once independent economy stayed shattered after almost a decade of grinding proxy war, while deliberately preventing reconstruction of its eviscerated industry, infrastructure, once excellent public education and health systems, and much more besides. Conversely, with the help of British intelligence “service provision”, HTS ever-strengthened not merely within territory it occupied, but the country more widely.

Come December 2024, the Syrian state was sufficiently crippled that it could be easily overrun by HTS - with MI6’s constellation of ‘humanitarian’ groups ensuring “continuity of service delivery.” In Venezuela, authorities have been enfeebled and impoverished by decades of US-led economic warfare, leaving them unable to adequately respond to the earthquakes. Collapsing the vestiges of Caracas’ revolutionary system wouldn’t require military action, but an influx of foreign“service providers”. The recently-arrived planeload White Helmets may represent the first shot fired in a new, secret war. 

The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect Al Mayadeen’s editorial stance.

Namibia President in Guangzhou, China, On First Day of Official Visit

6 July 2026

The Namibian (Windhoek)

President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah met with the leadership of the Guangdong province on Monday as the first official meeting of her trip to China.

The delegation met Guangdong province party secretary Huang Kunming, who also sits on the political bureau of the Chinese Communist Party central committee.

"[Huang] expressed confidence that the visit would elevate China-Namibia cooperation to new heights, further deepen bilateral relations and strengthen the longstanding friendship between the two countries," the Office of the Presidency says on social media in a post on Monday.

Guangzhou is the capital city of the southern province of Guangdong. The city is a global trading hub and is one of the four most important megacities in China.

"[The president said] she had deliberately chosen Guangzhou as her point of entry into China because of its significant economic profile and expressed confidence that the visit would create valuable opportunities for the Namibian delegation and accompanying business community," the Presidency says.

Nandi-Ndaitwah arrived in China on Sunday for a state visit at the invitation of Chinese president Xi Jinping. She will visit the Chinese cities of Shenzhen, Chengdu and Beijing. The visit is scheduled to end on Saturday.

Read the original article on Namibian.

Namibia VIP Protection Chief Removed After State House Security Breach

Namibia's President-Elect Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah thanking Namibians during "a memorable" Swapo victory celebration (file photo).

6 July 2026

The Namibian (Windhoek)

The head of the police's VIP protection unit, commissioner Michael Abraham, has been removed from his position following a security breach at State House involving an unauthorised intruder.

The unit is an elite division responsible for safeguarding the president, vice president, former presidents, ministers and key state installations.

Police sources over the weekend confirmed that Abraham has since been transferred to the police headquarters, where he has assumed a different role.

His removal follows an incident on 30 April in which Giano Seibeb (29) allegedly gained unauthorised access to State House.

Seibeb was reportedly found naked near the president's private residence.

Two senior police sources say deputy commissioner Sebastian Kandunda replaced Abraham as the head of the VIP protection unit.

"He has now been removed from the VIP and was replaced by deputy commissioner Kandunda. Abraham is currently reporting at national police headquarters," one of the sources says.

Acting police inspector general Anne-Marie Nainda yesterday also confirmed that Abraham is no longer attached to the VIP protection unit.

"Abraham is in the Office of the Inspector General, according to the structure.

He is an adviser in the office of the inspector general. He is not at VIP," she said.

Nainda said commissioner Andreas Nelumbu, who has transferred to the Kavango West region on 1 May, is still on leave.

The Namibian has been informed that Nelumbu may have resigned from the police following his removal from president Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah's protection detail in April.

Responding to questions about internal deployments, Nainda questioned the public interest in such matters.

"I don't know what interest people have in internal arrangements and running to the media.

What is the public going to benefit from who is on leave and who is where?" she asked.

She said Nelumbu is expected to resume duty at his designated post after his leave period ends.

Abraham yesterday declined to comment on his removal.

"I can only discuss that when you come to me, because there are so many strange things and talking to a stranger like that is not really advisable," he said.

Nelumbu was not reachable for comment yesterday.

"The owner of the phone is not available. Maybe you can call in 10 minutes," the person answering Nelumbu's phone said.

However, when The Namibian called again the call was not answered.

Windhoek Observer reported in May that Nelumbu had resigned from the police.

National police spokesperson deputy commissioner Kauna Shikwambi in mid-May, however, said Nelumbu was still an active member of the police.

Faye Moves to Launch New Party as Split with Sonko Deepens

By Dominic Wabwireh with AP

Senegalese President Bassirou Diomaye Faye is preparing to launch his own political party, signaling a decisive break with former Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko as the country's leadership rift widens ahead of key local elections and constitutional reforms.

Senegalese President Bassirou Diomaye Faye has begun preparations to establish his own political party, according to a coalition supporting the president.

The coalition said in a statement issued late on Friday that Faye had instructed senior adviser Aminata Touré to lead a task force responsible for creating the new political movement.

The move marks the clearest sign yet of a lasting split between Faye and his former ally, Ousmane Sonko.

Break with Pastef

Faye has remained a member of the ruling Pastef party since taking office, but relations with Sonko deteriorated over several months before the president dismissed him as prime minister in May.

Sonko has since become Speaker of the National Assembly, where he is championing constitutional reforms aimed at reshaping Senegal's political landscape.

Among the proposed changes is a provision preventing a sitting president from serving simultaneously as leader of a political party.

Reforms head to referendum

Lawmakers approved the constitutional amendments last week, but President Faye has opted to submit them to a national referendum instead of signing them into law.

Authorities have not yet announced a date for the vote.

The referendum is expected to become a key test of political support for both Faye and Sonko as their rivalry intensifies.

Political rivalry amid economic challenges

The growing political divide comes as Senegal grapples with an economic crisis triggered by revelations that the previous administration misreported public debt levels.

The dispute also unfolds ahead of 2027 local elections, which are expected to provide the first major indication of the electoral strength of both camps.

The planned creation of a new presidential party could significantly reshape Senegal's political landscape and redefine alliances within the country's ruling establishment.

Sahel Bloc Backs Burkina Faso as Rift with France Deepens

By Al Mayadeen English

1 Jul 2026 08:22

The Confederation of Sahel States backed Burkina Faso after it cut diplomatic ties with France, framing the dispute as part of a wider struggle against French and European interference in the Sahel.

The Confederation of Sahel States has thrown its weight behind Burkina Faso after Ouagadougou severed diplomatic relations with France, marking a new escalation in the wider confrontation between Sahel states and their former colonial power.

According to the Burkinabe news portal leFaso, the presidents of the parliaments of the Confederation of Sahel States, which groups Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, adopted a resolution on Tuesday condemning a European Parliament text issued earlier in June over the human rights situation in Burkina Faso.

AES condemns European Parliament resolution

"The presidents of the parliaments of the Confederation of Sahel States strongly condemn the resolution adopted by the European Parliament on 18 June 2026, which erroneously portrays the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms in Burkina Faso; they express their full support, solidarity, and fraternity with the Burkinabe authorities and people", the resolution read on Tuesday.

The statement was issued after parliamentary leaders from the three Sahel countries met in Ouagadougou on June 29 and 30, in talks aimed at strengthening parliamentary cooperation and advancing the operationalization of confederal parliamentary sessions within the AES.

The meeting reflected the bloc’s attempt to move beyond security coordination and build a more structured political framework, including harmonized legislation, stronger political consultation, and coordinated governance among its member states.

Sahel states push for a confederal framework

The AES parliamentary leaders also praised Burkina Faso’s efforts in the fight against terrorism and called for international cooperation based on respect for state sovereignty, a position that directly challenges the European Parliament’s criticism of Ouagadougou.

The European Parliament adopted its resolution on June 18 by 476 votes in favor, 11 against, and 75 abstentions. The text accused the Burkinabe authorities of restricting civil society, press freedoms, freedom of assembly, and freedom of expression. It also called for investigations into alleged rights violations and voiced concern over Russia’s growing influence in Burkina Faso following the expulsion of European forces.

Ouagadougou rejected the resolution as a distorted and hostile portrayal of the country’s internal situation, arguing that such criticism ignores the security challenges facing Burkina Faso as it battles armed groups and seeks to assert full sovereignty over its national decisions.

Burkina Faso cuts ties with France

The text was authored by French European Parliament member Christophe Gomart, a point that further fueled Burkinabe accusations that France continues to use European institutions to pressure its former colonies.

On June 26, Burkina Faso announced that it was severing diplomatic relations with France, accusing Paris of seeking to "dominate and subjugate the country to its will".

The French Foreign Ministry later said Paris was considering retaliatory measures, while rejecting Ouagadougou’s accusations.

Relations between Burkina Faso and France have steadily deteriorated since Captain Ibrahim Traoré came to power in 2022. Ouagadougou has since ended French military operations on its territory, expelled French diplomatic personnel, and moved closer to Mali and Niger through the Confederation of Sahel States.

Extremists Attack Five Malian Towns in Coordinated Dawn Attack

By Al Mayadeen English

4 Jul 2026 15:53

Al-Qaeda affiliates struck five Malian towns before dawn Saturday, with the FLA claiming gains in Anefis, two months after attacks killed the defense minister.

Mali's army announced on Saturday that insurgents launched attacks before dawn against its positions in Aguelhok, Anefis, Gao, Sévaré, and Kenieroba, spanning the country's north and center. Fighting in the different locations began around 5 am local time.

The army says the assaults were attempted strikes on its positions, according to a statement carried on state television.

In Gao, a local official told Reuters that gunfire and rocket fire had targeted a military camp since before dawn. Explosions were also reported in Sévaré, with aircraft later spotted flying over the area, a security source told AFP.

In Kenieroba, roughly 74 kilometers from Bamako, a major prison complex holding extremist prisoners came under attack. There were no immediate reports of casualties.

FLA claims gains in Anefis

The Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), a Tuareg-led separatist movement, confirmed it carried out the assault on Anefis, in the northeastern Kidal region.

For his part, spokesperson Mohamed Elmaouloud Ramadane told Reuters that several army positions in the town had fallen and that clashes were ongoing inside it.

A resident reached by AFP said armed fighters had entered the town but that the army camp had not yet fallen, and government forces were still resisting.

JNIM, the al-Qaeda-linked coalition that has also operated alongside the FLA, had not issued a claim as of Saturday.

Anefis and Aguelhok are the only locations in the Kidal region where Malian troops have maintained a presence since the collapse of government control there in late April, when FLA and JNIM fighters seized the city of Kidal itself.

Russian forces, deployed to Anefis after that offensive, are also stationed in the area, making it a focal point for both Bamako and Moscow's regional military presence.

Part of a broader pattern since April

Saturday's attacks come just over two months after JNIM and the FLA carried out a coordinated wave of strikes on military and administrative targets across Mali, including in Bamako, Kati, Gao, Sévaré, and Kidal.

That offensive killed Defense Minister Sadio Camara, whose responsibilities were temporarily transferred to President Assimi Goïta, and led to the withdrawal of Malian and Russian forces from Kidal and other northern towns.

Russia's Defense Ministry described the April events as a foiled coup attempt involving roughly 12,000 fighters, it said were trained with Western support.

Uganda Coffee Exports Hit by Weaker Prices

By Dominic Wabwireh with AP

Uganda's coffee export earnings dropped sharply in May as falling global prices and lower export volumes weighed on the country's top agricultural export. The decline highlights the vulnerability of Africa's largest coffee exporter to swings in international commodity markets.

Uganda earned US$151.7 million from coffee exports in May, a decline of about 38 percent from the US$244 million recorded in the same month last year, according to an Agriculture Ministry report released on Friday.

Export volumes also fell significantly, with the country shipping 617,491 60-kilogram bags compared with 793,445 bags in May 2025, a drop of more than 22 percent.

The ministry did not explain the decline in export volumes.

Global prices weaken

The fall in earnings was driven not only by reduced shipments but also by lower international coffee prices after months of elevated levels.

According to the ministry, prices eased in May as expectations grew for a larger harvest in Brazil, the world's biggest coffee producer, easing concerns over tight global supplies that had previously pushed prices to multi-year highs.

Coffee remains economic lifeline

Coffee remains Uganda's largest agricultural export and its leading source of foreign exchange, supporting millions of smallholder farmers across the country.

Uganda is Africa's biggest coffee exporter and has expanded production in recent years through government programmes promoting improved seedlings and higher farm productivity.

The country mainly exports robusta coffee, while arabica production has also grown steadily.

Value addition remains a priority

The government continues to encourage local roasting and processing to increase export earnings and reduce reliance on raw bean exports.

Officials say expanding domestic value addition will strengthen Uganda's position in international markets while generating higher returns for the economy.

Market outlook remains uncertain

Analysts say global coffee prices will continue to depend on weather conditions in major producing countries such as Brazil and Vietnam, as well as shipping costs, currency movements and global demand.

Despite the weaker performance in May, Uganda's coffee sector remains one of the country's strongest export industries, although the latest figures underscore how vulnerable export earnings remain to fluctuations in international commodity markets.

OPEC+ Boosts Oil Production as Gulf Exports Recover

FILE - The logo of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is displayed outside of OPEC's headquarters in Vienna, Austria, Thursday, March 3, 2022.

By Dominic Wabwireh with other agencies

Seven OPEC+ producers have agreed to increase oil production from August, signalling confidence that Gulf exports are recovering after months of disruption caused by the Middle East conflict. The move comes as shipping through the Strait of Hormuz gradually returns to normal.

Seven key OPEC+ members agreed on Sunday to raise oil production quotas by 188,000 barrels per day, with the increase taking effect in August 2026.

The decision was reached during a virtual meeting involving Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman, as the alliance seeks to restore supplies following months of reduced output linked to the conflict in the Gulf.

Recovery follows Hormuz disruption

The production increase comes after Gulf producers were forced to scale back exports when shipping through the Strait of Hormuz was severely disrupted during the Middle East war.

According to OPEC data, combined oil production by Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Kuwait fell by around six million barrels per day between the first quarter of 2026 and May.

A memorandum of understanding signed by Iran and the United States on June 17 has since helped restore maritime traffic through the strategic waterway, allowing exports to gradually recover.

Output still below target

Despite improving shipping conditions, analysts say production has yet to return to pre-conflict levels.

UBS commodity analyst Giovanni Staunovo said current output remains below OPEC+ targets, while Ole Hansen of Saxo Bank noted that restarting oil fields shut during the conflict is a gradual process that could take several weeks.

As a result, July is expected to show modest gains, with a stronger recovery anticipated in August.

Price risks remain

While rebuilding depleted inventories could initially absorb the additional supply, analysts warn that oil markets may face a surplus in 2027, increasing downward pressure on prices.

The challenge comes at a sensitive time for OPEC+, which is adjusting to the departure of the United Arab Emirates from the group and preparing for a review of members' production baselines later this year.

Quota debate looms

Iraq has already called for higher production quotas to offset losses suffered during the Gulf conflict.

Although analysts believe an immediate increase is unlikely, the request is expected to feature prominently during OPEC+'s 2027 capacity review, when the alliance reassesses production limits based on each member's output potential.

Why Some African Nations are Turning Down Trump Aid Money

Barbara Plett Usher

Africa correspondent

A nurse with a Ghana flag looks on during independence day celebrations at the Jubilee House on 6 March 2025 in Accra.

Ghana rejected a proposed $109m health deal with the US in April over data protection concerns

After dismantling the main US body for delivering foreign assistance last year, the Trump administration is again offering hundreds of millions of dollars to African countries to support their healthcare structures and help fight disease.

But the new deals come with conditions attached and as a result, face resistance from some governments.

When the initial agreement was signed by Kenya's President William Ruto in Washington last December, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said he hoped it would be the first of many.

"We hope to sign, I don't know, 30, 40, how many? Fifty? Well, this is number one. We'll always remember this one… and we think we've picked the perfect partner," Rubio declared.

But even this landmark deal with Kenya, worth $2.5bn (£1.9bn), has been delayed by activists who went to court to block it, although cabinet ministers did finally approve it last month.

Shortly after taking office, President Donald Trump ordered the closure of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) amid accusations of wastefulness, in the process decimating health programmes in some African countries that relied on American funding.

The State Department's new global health strategy requires recipient governments to share responsibility by increasing their own health spending, with the goal of building durable systems that can eventually be self-reliant. It is, for example, contributing $1.6bn to the overall deal with Kenya - with the East African nation pledging $850m over five years.

The Trump administration hopes that partnering with national leaderships will improve on traditional donor-NGO relationships which it says created dependency, led to parallel delivery arrangements and sucked up aid dollars in overhead costs.

"Our aid to those countries will not just be dollars distributed to an NGO who then will go into the country and impose programmes," Rubio told a congressional committee last month.

"Not only are we treating the acute situations on the ground of people that are sick, we are helping them build the capacity and the capability to do this for themselves."

But the result is a shift away from a model of global cooperation anchored in the World Health Organization (WHO), to direct agreements with individual governments that are tied to US strategic and commercial interests.

The US withdrew from the WHO early this year saying it was unfair that Washington provided so much more funding than other countries and alleging that the organisation mismanaged the Covid-19 crisis, lacked transparency, and was susceptible to political influence.

Controversially, the American bilateral deals come with an explicit promise to prioritise US pharmaceuticals and medical firms to develop and deliver treatments.

"Our global health foreign assistance programme is not just aid - it is a strategic mechanism to further our bilateral interests around the world," says the policy document.

Thirty-two countries had accepted the health Memorandums of Understanding (MOU) by mid-May, in Latin America, the Caribbean and at least 20 in Africa. But some - such as Ghana, Zimbabwe and Zambia - have resisted signing up, citing different reasons.

In Zambia, Foreign Minister Mulambo Haimbe criticised what he described as an American effort to link health funding to US economic interests by connecting the deal to a separate agreement giving Washington access to critical minerals.

"Our [US] colleagues looked at it from the perspective that [the two deals] must be taken as a package to be negotiated and concluded at one particular time," he told the BBC, saying the Zambian government wanted to discuss them separately on their own merits.

"The US felt that there is need for there to be a preferential treatment in the use of critical minerals. And the framework was to reflect that," he added.

The State Department stopped short of explicitly linking the two when questioned by the BBC but offered a robust "America First" response.

"The Trump administration has made clear, US foreign assistance is not charity - rather it is strategic capital to be wisely invested to advance US interests - and we expect all of our allies and recipient nations to take seriously American strategic and commercial priorities," a department spokesperson said.

Last month provided further evidence of this readiness to tie health financing to American priorities - with the announcement that the US would withdraw completely from funding HIV/Aids programmes in South Africa.

An administration official connected the move to Pretoria's "failure to make demonstrable progress on policy requests", including apparently the treatment of the white-minority Afrikaner community. US claims that a "white genocide" is taking place in South Africa have been widely discredited.

For some African countries who were negotiating the bilateral MOUs, it was concerns over US access to health data which set alarm bells ringing. This included patients' information as well as biological resources known as pathogens - organisms that cause disease such as viruses, bacteria and parasites.

A Kenyan court initially suspended the country's deal after legal challenges demanding protection of patient privacy.

Arnold Kavaarpuo, executive director of Ghana's Data Protection Commission, told the BBC the government in Accra had objected to the deal it was offered for similar reasons.

"We had concerns around the scope and breadth of data that was being required," he said.

"It was us generating data and passing it on to the US authorities, and there were no real reciprocal measures when it comes to the protection of Ghanaian data and Ghanaian sovereignty.

"And so from our perspective," he added, "once the data left the Ghanaian borders, we had no control over what becomes of it."

Zimbabwe also cited concerns about requests for medical data, presumably to be shared with US pharmaceutical companies, as the reason it rejected a deal.

There were no guarantees that drugs or vaccines developed from the pathogens would be available to its people, a government spokesman said, pointing out that the WHO already had a system for members to share data and benefit from any treatments in future pandemics.

African countries have previously passed on medical information through existing schemes including USAID and Pepfar, America's main programme to tackle HIV and Aids.

The US insists the sharing of data and specimens is key to continuing scientific development and mutual co-operation.

And a State Department spokesperson said the material requested was the same aggregated and de-identified data which has been used for years in the fight against infectious diseases.

What has changed is the context, says Nelson Aghogho Evaborhene, a PhD fellow in global health governance at Roskilde University in Denmark.

"It was an unequal relationship, but it was quite tolerable politically," he says, "because you could sell it to the domestic population as an altruistic need to improve health service.

"But now it has changed significantly, because it's more about very transactional leverage."

Many African nations have also drawn lessons from Covid, as the race to find a vaccine proved the value of pathogen data but left the continent struggling to get doses for its people.

"I think one of our biggest opportunities as Africa," says Aggrey Aluso, the executive director of Resilience Action Network Africa (Rana), "is the fact that we have important information that can help build the global health security ecosystem."

Rana joined more than 50 civil society groups in signing an open letter warning African leaders that US terms were not guided by African national or regional interests, a view shared by South Africa.

"Frankly speaking, no nation on Earth that respects itself should accede to [two requests]," South Africa's Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi told the BBC.

"That [the US] will get their pathogen if there's any pandemic or epidemic in their area.

"And they'll also provide them with a genome for life. But the US is going to give them money for five years."

The debate over health diplomacy has been thrown into sharper relief in recent weeks following the spread of a new outbreak of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

DR Congo was one of the first countries to accept the new American health deals - and the US says the agreement is helping co-ordinate Kinshasa's response to the crisis.

But, according to humanitarian workers and former US health officials, sweeping US aid cuts to DR Congo and to the WHO seriously weakened the front-line response.

Amadou Bocoum, the DR Congo country director for the international humanitarian organisation Care, says he had to lay off 36 workers - a third of his staff - after USAID cuts, including those responsible for community mobilisation, health education and Ebola prevention.

"When this new Ebola came, the staffing was not there, and the emergency stock that we also used to have was also not there," he says.

"With proper funding, we would have had prepositioned stock and begun distributing critical supplies like PPE from day one, but instead, we started with nothing and lost 10 days."

Critics describe the dismantling of the USAID as a blow to the speed of detecting the Ebola outbreak and the scale of response, emphasising that the humanitarian agency was crucial to organising logistics, supplies and local outreach.

"I just cannot imagine that if you still had the full slate of health partners that the US government was funding in Congo up until [the cuts] shut most of that down, that no-one would have seen that an unidentified viral haemorrhagic fever was spreading," adds Jeremy Konyndyk, who led the USAID response to the 2014 Ebola epidemic in West Africa.

The US denies its cuts have harmed efforts this time, arguing that they are more "aligned and effective" under the new arrangement and pointing to the $270m it has donated to tackle the epidemic.

Underpinning the US deals is the administration's desire to encourage national governments to spend more of their own money on their health services - observers say there is a poor record of this in Africa, despite a continental commitment to do so in 2001.

Reuters Congolese medical workers in blue personal protective equipment (PPE) sanitise pink and blue rubber gloves in buckets at Ebola treatment centre in Bunia. Gloves already washed dry upright on sticks spoked into the grass.Reuters

The US has donated $270m to tackle the current outbreak of Ebola

But others warn that the Ebola outbreak has highlighted the risks of a bilateral approach to global health.

"Bilateral relationships ignore collective challenges," says Dr Kevin DeCock, a former director at the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) who worked for many years at the forefront of battling infectious disease.

"Global health, by definition, is transnational, crosses borders, does not concern just one country. Global health problems require global approaches, and no country can go it alone."

Some health and foreign policy analysts have made a case for giving the administration's new strategy a chance.

In an article for conservative think-tank the American Enterprise Institute, Brett Schaefer and Roger Bate acknowledge the risk of stepping away from the multilateral system, especially the withdrawal from the WHO.

But this "is not the end of American leadership in global health", they write. "It is the start of a test - of whether influence is better exercised through conditional engagement, parallel institutions and results-driven partnerships than through deference to an organisation that has struggled to learn from failure."

Evidence so far is that months on from Rubio's excited signing of the first MOU, adoption of the bilateral agreements in Africa remains patchy and controversial.

Tanzania has just signed up to the partnership, yet with several African nations saying thanks but no thanks, it remains to be seen how far the reshaping of America's global health strategy will go.

He Wrote a Scathing Message to ICE. Federal Agents Showed Up at His Door

David Streever of Rochester, New York, sued Department of Homeland Security officials on Monday, saying the agency’s actions violated his First Amendment rights.

July 6, 2026 at 12:24 p.m. EDT

Summary

Department of Homeland Security agents came to David Streever’s home in Rochester, New York, last month. (Courtesy of Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression)

By Joanna Slater

When two Americans were killed by federal agents during the immigration crackdown in Minneapolis this year, David Streever was filled with outrage. On Jan. 26, the Upstate New York resident wrote a brief, caustic email to Todd M. Lyons, then acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Streever called Lyons a “monstrous human being” and “America’s Reinhard Heydrich,” a reference to a high-ranking official in Nazi Germany who oversaw the regime’s secret police. He says he never dreamed the note would lead to a knock on his own door.

About five months later, Department of Homeland Security agents came to Streever’s house in Rochester, New York, according to a lawsuit filed Monday in federal court. Streever wasn’t home, but DHS tracked him to a hotel in New York City where he and his 7-year-old daughter were staying overnight after returning from a trip to Finland.

Agents told the hotel front desk they were looking for him, left repeated voicemails and sought to have him sign an unusual warning notice saying his email could be a crime.

In his lawsuit against DHS officials, Streever says the department’s actions violate the First Amendment, which broadly protects freedom of speech and individual expression.

“Americans have a clear right to criticize government officials,” said JT Morris, deputy director of litigation at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, the nonprofit group representing Streever.

“When federal agents come to your door and ask you to stop engaging in political speech,” Morris said, it “is an act of intimidation that the Constitution doesn’t tolerate.”

Streever declined an interview through his lawyers but said in a statement that he never expected his email to draw attention from law enforcement.

“I cherish our right to speak openly about issues of public concern,” the statement said. “I hope others will not be discouraged from peacefully expressing their views, even when those views are critical of the government.”

When asked about Streever’s case, a DHS spokesperson said it “investigates all credible threats toward its employees and officers, including threats to the ICE Director.” The department declined to say why it considered Streever’s email a credible threat or how many people have received similar warning notices.

But the department has tracked down others critical of its operations, according to Paigelynne Gonyea, an online influencer who also lives in Upstate New York and was presented with the same form last month.

Gonyea has been a vocal critic of ICE’s high-profile enforcement operation in Minnesota, which included the arrest of tens of thousands of immigrants and the fatal shootings of Renée Good and Alex Pretti, both U.S. citizens who were protesting the detention campaign.

DHS accused Gonyea of revealing an ICE agent’s address online, something Gonyea denies. The department has not provided evidence for its allegation. A DHS spokesperson said Gonyea had “committed a federal crime” that puts the lives of federal law enforcement officers in danger.

Civil liberties experts said the warning notices delivered to Streever and Gonyea mark a new development in a broader campaign by DHS to track and intimidate its critics. Those tactics include the use of administrative subpoenas to unmask anonymous critics, experts said, along with threats to prosecute people who exercise their rights to document law enforcement operations.

Last year, DHS agents visited the home of a Pennsylvania man after he emailed a federal prosecutor a plea to stop the deportation of an Afghan asylum seeker. The government also sought the contents of the man’s Google account using an administrative subpoena.

The Trump administration’s conduct represents a marked shift, said Aaron Mackey, deputy legal director at the Electronic Frontier Federation. Previous administrations generally adopted a hands-off approach to critics unless a person made an actual threat to a public official or otherwise did something illegal, he said.

“They don’t send ICE agents to people’s doors,” Mackey said. “They don’t send law enforcement to demand information from internet and social media companies.”

Meanwhile, courts have affirmed that harsh, caustic and unpleasant criticism of the government is a critical part of freedom of expression. “The First Amendment protects people’s ability to essentially be jerks to public officials,” Mackey said.

Gonyea, 40, was working at a polling station on June 23, the day of the New York primary, when two DHS agents arrived looking for her. They had a folder containing information on her, she said, and repeatedly asked her to sign the warning notice. She refused.

On Jan. 8, Gonyea posted on her Instagram account that the Minnesota Star Tribune had identified Jonathan Ross as the ICE agent who fatally shot Good. “I think today is a great day for Jonathan to be indicted!” Gonyea wrote.

There are no posts on Gonyea’s Instagram account that reveal other information about Ross, such as his address, and she said she had not deleted such a post.

The unsigned warning notice from ICE is now affixed to Gonyea’s fridge, and she has posted about her experience on Instagram. Her story was first reported by Syracuse.com.

The experience has been “kind of surreal,” Gonyea said. “Even after all this is over, the First Amendment is something I will continue fighting for.”

Since Gonyea went public about her encounter with DHS, she said, she has heard from six other people around the country — including Streever — who say they also received similar visits from federal agents in recent months. The visits were related to emails the people had sent to public officials, comments they made online or alleged doxing, Gonyea said, adding that nearly all of the other people were not comfortable speaking to a reporter about their experience.

The form delivered to Streever and Gonyea advises recipients that they may have violated a federal law making it a crime to threaten a federal official with harm or reveal an official’s personal information with threatening intent.

Streever’s email to Lyons “doesn’t come anywhere close” to the conduct prohibited by the statute, said Nathan Freed Wessler, a deputy director at the American Civil Liberties Union.

What’s more, to “pound on someone’s door and say sign this acknowledgment” is “a really irregular procedure,” Freed Wessler added. It’s an “escalation coming out of an administration that has already broken through numerous norms and legal behavior against retaliation for people’s protected speech.”

Streever’s lawsuit says that the government’s actions have made him afraid to express his views and that he seeks an injunction to prevent DHS from engaging in any further “acts of coercion and retaliation” against him.

The night after DHS tracked Streever and his daughter to a New York City hotel, the duo boarded an Amtrak train to return home to Rochester. Before arriving at Penn Station, Streever prepared his 7-year-old for the possibility that federal agents might confront them on their journey, the lawsuit says.

His daughter began to cry. “I don’t want them to kill you,” she told her father.

Why U.S. Measles Outbreaks Have Grown Harder to Extinguish

The nation is already nearing last year’s record case total, and experts say the virus is forcing doctors to relearn a disease many thought had been consigned to history.

July 6, 2026 at 5:00 a.m. EDT

Summary

A measles, mumps and rubella vaccine is administered to a 1-year-old in Seattle last year. (Lindsey Wasson/AP)

By Lena H. Sun

The United States is on the brink of surpassing last year’s total measles cases, putting the country on track to set a new record before summer’s end.

The impending milestone underscores how the country has entered a new phase in its battle with measles, with repeated new infections of the deadly disease igniting sustained outbreaks in multiple states rather than staying concentrated in a few undervaccinated communities.

Since an unvaccinated child in West Texas developed measles early last year, successive outbreaks have sickened thousands of people and have now spread to 39 states, the District of Columbia and New York City. Last year, the U.S. reported 2,288 measles cases, the highest since measles was eliminated in 2000 and the most in more than three decades. The U.S. is now poised to reach that level in roughly half the time, with 2,170 measles cases as of July 2, according to the CDC.

As vaccination rates decline and measles spreads wider, those outbreaks are becoming harder to extinguish. There are fewer people to investigate cases, communities most affected often remain difficult to reach, and a generation of doctors is getting a crash course in diagnosing and managing a disease many have rarely — if ever — encountered. State health officials fear their outbreaks may never end and say the actual number of cases is far higher than official counts reflect.

“Maybe we’ll get it under control here in Utah, but other states will go through what we just experienced, and then it will come back here,” said Utah state epidemiologist, Leisha Nolen. Utah is now home to the largest active outbreak. “I have concerns that this could be the future for a while.”

Utah’s measles outbreak, which began in an isolated community along the Arizona border in June 2025, has spread into nearly every county in the state. Although transmission has slowed, Nolen worries new “introductions,” the initial establishment of a disease into a new geographic region, could reignite it when schools reopen. More than 680 people have been sickened, with more than 500 infections this year.

A genetic analysis suggests the true number of Utah’s cases is probably four times higher, Nolen said.

Health officials in Virginia, Pennsylvania and other states have similar fears about continued introductions.

“I think we’ve seen a threshold where there are introductions happening all the time, all over the place,” said Andrew Pavia, an infectious-disease physician and professor of pediatrics and medicine at the University of Utah.

Public health officials and infectious-disease experts say several factors account for the rapid spread of measles this year.

Doctors confront a disease they have never seen

In a sign of how seriously physicians view the threat, more than a dozen medical and public health organizations launched an unusual effort this month to help prepare doctors and hospitals for a disease many practicing physicians have rarely — or never — encountered but may now need to manage as part of everyday practice.

“Clinicians really haven’t thought about measles,” said Patsy Stinchfield, executive director of the new group, the Measles Collaborative. “They skipped that chapter in medical school” because the U.S. eliminated the disease more than a quarter-century ago, she said. “And here they are now, having to diagnose it.”

The group, established by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, is developing an app to help doctors diagnose measles. It is creating hospital checklists and clinical algorithms to guide the complicated logistics of safely caring for patients. Because the virus can remain suspended in the air for up to two hours, hospitals must carefully determine where patients are evaluated, isolated and treated.

To counter misinformation on social media, the group plans to create TikToks and Instagram posts for parents to explain the basics of measles, including how sick children can get.

Most children recover after several miserable days of fever, cough, congestion and pink eye.

But measles can also cause pneumonia, brain swelling, deafness, intellectual disability and death. It can trigger a rare but invariably fatal brain disease, subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, or SSPE, years after the initial infection.

Pavia worries many parents still underestimate how sick measles can make children.

“People aren’t really motivated by fear of the rare, terrible thing,” said Pavia, who has cared for children hospitalized for measles. “What I think would help much more is if people realized that they would see their 4-year-old sicker than they’ve ever been. Moaning and crying in bed or needing to be hospitalized for two or three days on oxygen, fighting to breathe.”

Some doctors worry about what happens after children recover.

Measles can erase immune memory, leaving children temporarily vulnerable to infections such as influenza and covid-19 — even if they had previously been vaccinated or infected. Those infectious diseases could result in a whole new set of complications. In recent years, the country has seen some of the highest numbers of flu deaths among children in decades.

“That means those people who get measles now get to have flu, get to have covid, essentially as if they were getting those infections for the first time,” Nolen said.

Vaccination rates keep falling

Vaccination rates have fallen across the country since the pandemic. At the same time, the share of children claiming religious and other exemptions from vaccine requirements is at an all-time high, according to federal data.



Two doses of the childhood measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine are 97 percent effective against infection and nearly wiped out a virus that once infected millions of children. But because the virus is so easily transmitted without immunization, 95 percent of a community needs to be vaccinated for herd immunity, the level needed to prevent isolated cases from becoming outbreaks.

The basic reproduction number calculates a range of the number of people who will contract an infection from every one person with the virus. Below shows the maximum of the infection range for each disease.

Nationwide, 92.5 percent of kindergartners had received the measles vaccine in the 2024-2025 school year, lower than the previous year.

Before the pandemic, about half of U.S. counties met the 95 percent threshold among kindergartners. By the 2024-2025 school year, fewer than 3 in 10 did, according to a Washington Post examination of public records.

In Utah, only 88.6 percent of kindergartners had received the MMR vaccine for the 2024-2025 school year, according to state health department data, compared with 92.7 before the pandemic.

Nationally, 3.6 percent of kindergartners claimed vaccine exemptions in 2024-2025. In Utah, for the 2025-2026 school year, the rate was 12.7 percent, and in the Southwest health district where the outbreak began, rates have soared: 27.1 percent of children had an exemption.

When measles reaches those pockets of unvaccinated children, Nolen said, “it can easily take off.”

The rise in vaccine hesitancy has affected vaccine-preventable diseases beyond measles.

For example, cases of pertussis, or whooping cough, which is highly contagious, have been on the increase nationally. UCHealth, the largest health system in Colorado, has already confirmed 168 pertussis cases in the first six months of 2026 — surpassing the 126 cases recorded during all of 2025, said Michelle Barron, UCHealth’s senior medical director for infection prevention and control.

Health departments are stretched

Once the measles virus starts spreading, health departments rely on labor-intensive contact tracing, case investigations and quarantine measures to keep outbreaks from growing. But public health officials say recent federal funding cuts have left many departments with fewer people to do that critical work.

Despite the rapid resurgence in measles activity across the country, outbreak control capacity of health departments in the U.S. has not recovered or expanded.

“We didn’t increase our preparedness and our ability to fight measles,” Pavia said.

When South Carolina was battling an outbreak that ultimately sickened 997 people, most of them this year, the health department had lost dozens of epidemiologists, infection preventionists and other public health staff as a result of federal funding cuts, said Linda Bell, who recently retired as state epidemiologist.

“That was just very taxing for the remaining staff,” Bell said in an interview.

South Carolina scrambled to hire temporary staff, but Bell said the reinforcements couldn’t replace the expertise that had been lost and officials ultimately shifted from containment to mitigation.

The virus surged through dozens of schools in Spartanburg County, the outbreak epicenter, which long had lower childhood vaccination rates than much of the state. Students were sent into quarantine multiple times before the outbreak was declared over in April. Schools that required multiple rounds of quarantine had average vaccination rates of 77 percent, according to a recent study by Cornell University researchers.

Researchers said South Carolina’s outbreak reflected a pattern seen repeatedly in the U.S., in which faith communities with shared views on vaccination sustain and amplify transmission. Twenty-nine cases were linked to one church.

“I think that we transitioned from containment to mitigation because we saw ongoing spread for weeks and weeks,” said Bell, who retired in April.

Different states, different responses

Public health officials say one of the biggest challenges is navigating communities that no longer trust government or health institutions, forcing authorities to carefully tailor messaging or consider what people are willing to do for the public good.

But individual states have different systems and different playbooks.

As cases spread across Utah, local health districts avoided using the word “quarantine,” fearing it would trigger negative feelings from lockdowns and restrictions during the covid pandemic. Some places used the term “school exclusion” instead to encourage unvaccinated children to stay home after exposures, Nolen said. But that phrasing likely dulled the urgency of the message, public health experts say.

One local health district opted to have only the unvaccinated children at highest risk — classmates or children on the same bus as an infected child — stay home.

The standard — and safest — public health approach would have been to keep all unvaccinated children home, said Ellie Brownstein, president-elect of the Utah chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

But that approach would not have been accepted by all communities, Nolen said.

“If we go for things that are unrealistic and unacceptable, we have no possibility of doing our job,” Nolen said.

Nolen said the challenge isn’t more messaging but rebuilding connections with communities that don’t engage with traditional public health communication.

“I do strongly believe part of the flaws with public health is we just aren’t connecting with everyone,” Nolen said.

After she visited the hardest-hit communities in southwest Utah, where distrust of government runs deep and childhood vaccination rates are low, residents told her they weren’t anti-vaccine. They just didn’t know who to trust, Nolen said.

Many told her they felt judged when they sought medical care. Had they felt more welcome, “they might have actually eventually gotten to the point where they could trust somebody and have a conversation that would make them feel confident about getting vaccinated,” she said.

In South Carolina, the centralized health department allowed officials to direct resources to the Spartanburg area. Standardized response protocols meant epidemiologists anywhere in the state followed the same response playbook, Bell said.

Bell also held 26 weekly media briefings, starting in October, throughout the outbreak, which she said helped inform the public and probably encouraged vaccination.

But rebuilding trust has become even harder because health officials are now confronting not only the disease itself but also misinformation.

Messages from elected and appointed leaders who reject evidence-based public health recommendations have undermined outbreak responses, said Bell, who did not identify officials by name. Since taking office, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has questioned vaccine safety, reshaped federal vaccine policy and criticized long-standing vaccination recommendations.

“In the past ... we were battling the diseases,” Bell said. “We were not battling this misinformation that is now coming from an entirely different stream that is within the federal government.”

Naema Ahmed, Jenny Ye and Dylan Moriarty contributed to this report.

Sunday, July 05, 2026

Egypt Says it is Expecting a Further $1.7 Billion from Europe Within Days

Egypt said on Saturday that it expects to receive a $1.7 billion package from the European Union within days.

It would be the first of two remaining tranches of a $5.7 billion macro-financial assistance package.

Egypt’s Foreign ​Minister Badr Abdelatty said Cairo hoped the last payment would be transferred ‌by ⁠the start of autumn.

The assistance package has become a cornerstone of Europe’s strategy to stabilise one of Africa’s largest economies.

Brussels increasingly views Egypt as a strategic partner amid its role in managing migration routes, its influence in regional conflicts, and Red Sea disruptions.

The EU funding comes as Cairo continues implementing economic reforms under an IMF-backed programme.

It is designed to restore macroeconomic stability after years of mounting external debt, high inflation, and foreign currency shortages.

A Boat Transporting Students from Exams Sinks in Congo, Killing at Least 20, Authorities Say

1:36 PM EDT, July 4, 2026

KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — A wooden boat transporting students back from state exams sank in central Congo, killing at least 20 people, authorities said. The vessel was traveling in Kasai province when it sank while entering the confluence of the Sankuru and Kasai rivers, according to witnesses.

Deadly boating tragedies are common in the central African country, where late-night travels and overcrowded vessels are often blamed. Poor safety standards and lack of infrastructure in remote parts of the country also contribute to the hundreds killed in boat disasters in recent years.

“There were 80 survivors and 20 bodies,” said Francois Kabula, administrator of the Ilebo territory in Kasai province, where the sinking happened Friday.

However, Tshikudi Jean, who witnessed the crash, told The Associated Press that the boat was carrying over 200 people.

“The shipowners of the DRC are only after money and don’t care about human lives,” François Malepo, president of the Ilebo civil society organization said.

Nigeria Says 2 Nationals Were Killed During Anti-migrant Violence in South Africa

Nigerian nationals repatriated from South Africa, following concerns about unrest, arrive at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos, Nigeria, Tuesday, June 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

11:43 AM EDT, July 5, 2026

LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Nigeria said Sunday that two of its nationals were killed last month in South Africa following violent anti-immigrant protests targeting African workers in the country.

The Nigerians were killed June 28, two days before an unofficial deadline by protesters for foreigners to leave, the Nigerian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. One was allegedly killed by police officers and the other by unidentified attackers, it said.

South African police did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press.

Anti-immigrant protesters in April and May blamed foreigners for high levels of unemployment, crime and pressure on public services. The violence at the protests and attacks on Africans prompted Nigeria, Ghana and Malawi to repatriate their citizens and summon South African diplomats.

“These two killings come at a time when foreigners are being unduly targeted in South Africa. This raises questions about deliberate attempt by some elements to wrongfully generalise and tag well-meaning, hard-working, and respectable Nigerians as criminals,” Nigerian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Kimiebi Imomotimi Ebienfa said.

South Africa has a history of violence sparked by anger over the presence of migrants, including in 2008, when more than 60 people were killed in what international rights groups called xenophobic attacks on foreigners.

Residents in Eastern DR Congo Cling to Hope as a New Ebola Treatment Trial Begins

By PROSPER HERI NGORORA and MARK BANCHEREAU

1:11 AM EDT, July 5, 2026

BUNIA, Congo (AP) — Residents at the epicenter of Congo’s Ebola outbreak are pinning their hopes on experimental treatments after researchers began a highly anticipated study in early July of two possible Ebola treatments in hopes of fighting the still-growing outbreak.

At the Ebola treatment center inside Bunia’s Evangelical Medical Center, in eastern Congo’s Ituri province, the launch of the research was marked by urgency rather than ceremony on Thursday.

As ambulances continued arriving and healthcare workers disappeared behind layers of protective equipment into isolation wards, the research effort unfolded quietly alongside the daily struggle to keep patients alive.

The virus causing this outbreak, called Bundibugyo, is less common than others that cause Ebola disease and there are no specific treatments or vaccines for it. Already more than 1,400 people have been diagnosed and 438 have died, the head of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said Thursday.

The WHO announced the same day that the first participant had been enrolled in the study, which is evaluating whether the antiviral remdesivir, the experimental antibody treatment MBP134, or a combination of both can improve survival among patients infected with the Bundibugyo virus.

Survival will be tracked for 28 days after starting treatment, according to WHO research adviser Dr. Vasee Moorthy.

The WHO-supported trial is a collaboration between Congo’s national biomedical research institute INRB, Britain’s Oxford University, Antwerp’s Institute of Tropical Medicine and other international health groups.

The current trial focuses on confirmed Ebola patients receiving treatment inside specialized treatment centers, said professor Yap Boum, head of emergency response at the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. A second phase of the trial will include healthcare workers, close contacts and others at high risk of infection, he added.

Professor Placide Mbala, coordinator of laboratory activities for the current outbreak, said the research could continue for between three and six months, depending on how quickly the outbreak evolves.

Trial offers hope in area where virus has spread

For many residents of Bunia, the beginning of the trial offers a rare source of encouragement after weeks of mounting fear.

Audrey Tengetenge, a Bunia resident, said the trials represent a “light at the end of the tunnel.”

“I hope everything moves very quickly so that we can find relief. We want nothing more than an end to this very dangerous disease, which continues to bring us grief,” Tengetenge added.

Gladys Munguro, who survived Ebola and was discharged from an Ebola treatment center two weeks ago, said she watched fellow patients die while she was receiving care.

Now recovered, Munguro said she hopes the new treatments being tested will improve patients’ chances of survival and help bring the outbreak under control.

“This experimental phase is necessary for us,” Munguro told The Associated Press. “I will volunteer as soon as the next phase of the trials begins for high-risk individuals.”

But researchers will have to overcome pockets of deep mistrust in the community.

Nelson Dhebi, a shopkeeper in Bunia, said that while he supports scientific research and hopes for a positive outcome, he is concerned that the treatments could cause deaths and thinks that others should be part of the trials. “Research should be carried out first and foremost on our elected representatives, as they are the ones who represent us,” he said.

Challenges hamper the response

Community mistrust is just one of the many challenges that have hindered the response to the outbreak. Overcrowded treatment centers in hard-hit areas, delays in people seeking care and insecurity restricting access to conflict-affected areas remain major obstacles.

Nearly three out of four Ebola deaths during this outbreak occur outside of health centers, Pierre Akilimali, incident manager at Congo’s National Institute of Public Health said Friday.

Currently, the study is being offered only at Bunia’s Evangelical Medical Centre in Ituri. The region has been hit hard by violence, including toward healthcare workers trying to fight the virus, which spreads by contact with sick patients’ bodily fluids.

Officials plan to expand the trials to other locations once it is safe to do so.

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Banchereau reported from Dakar, Senegal. Constant Same Bagalwa in Bunia contributed to this report.