Sunday, June 21, 2026

‘Kind, Principled’: Colleagues Remember Gaza Journalist Killed by Israel

Ahmed Wishah is the 12th Al Jazeera journalist killed by Israel in Gaza since October 2023.

Ahmed Washah, cameraman for Al Jazeera Mubasher [File: Al Jazeera Arabic]

By Priyanka Shankar and Mohammad Mansour

21 Jun 2026

Palestinian journalists have paid tribute to their Al Jazeera colleague Ahmed Wishah, who was killed in an Israeli air attack on central Gaza’s Bureij refugee camp. He is the 12th Al Jazeera journalist killed by Israel in Gaza, which has become the deadliest place for journalists in the world.

Wishah, 25, was killed on Saturday, weeks after his brother Mohammed, who also worked for the Doha-based network, was killed in deliberate Israeli shelling of his car.

At least 260 Palestinian journalists have been killed since Israel launched its genocidal war in October 2023, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Who was Wishah, and what has Israel said about his killing?

Here’s what we know:

Who was Wishah?

Born in the Bureij refugee camp, Ahmed Samir Mohammed Wishah was the youngest of three brothers. He worked as a cameraman for Al Jazeera Mubasher.

The journalist was killed when an Israeli air attack hit a house. Two other Palestinians were also killed in the strike as Israel has continued its attacks despite an October “ceasefire”.

Wishah gained prominence during the Gaza war by accompanying and filming footage for his late brother, an Al Jazeera Mubasher correspondent killed on April 8.

Together, they formed a media duo that documented the suffering of the Palestinian people and the unfolding events of the war.

In an interview after his brother’s death, Wishah called on the world to stop the killing of journalists.

“Let the martyrdom of Mohammed Wishah be the end to the killing of journalists. This is my message to the world. Someone should stop the occupation from targeting journalists. That’s our only message: Stop the Israeli occupation from targeting journalists,” Ahmed said in April.

Ahmed’s dedication to his brother extended far beyond his journalistic duties.

After Mohammed’s death, he also took care of his late brother’s children and took on additional responsibilities within their family.

What have colleagues said about him?

Talal Mahmoud, an Al Jazeera Mubasher correspondent in Gaza, recalled his close ties with the two brothers.

“I’ve known Ahmed since the beginning of the war. He was always present, accompanying his brother Mohammed in the tent where he stayed,” Mahmoud said.

“Given our shared work, we frequently gathered in that tent at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital or al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat camp, exchanging thoughts and discussing the details of our coverage.”

“He became not just a friend but a colleague at the same channel. He would often accompany me on assignments, documenting the events we covered throughout the long months of this war.”

Mahmoud also shared a poignant story from just days before Ahmed’s death.

“My last encounter with Ahmed was a few days ago when he told us his mother wanted to prepare a meal in memory of his martyred brother, Mohammed. He brought us maftoul [a traditional Palestinian dish], saying, ‘This is from my mother, a mercy offering for the soul of my brother Mohammed. Please pray for him.'”

“We ate until we were full, and we prayed fervently for Mohammed’s mercy and forgiveness,” Mahmoud reflected.

Speaking from a cemetery in Bureij, Khaled al-Shatli, also an Al Jazeera Mubasher cameraman, painted Ahmed as a gentle soul.

“When you talk about Ahmed Wishah, you are talking about a polite and highly moral young man.”

“He was so well-spoken and possessed such beautiful manners. He would constantly joke with all the colleagues working alongside him.”

The final days of Ahmed’s life seemed to carry a farewell message, al-Shatli noted.

“Just yesterday, he was bidding farewell to his friends and family in the Bureij camp, taking photos with them in what felt like a final goodbye,” he said on Sunday.

Recalling their last meeting on Friday, he added: “I joked with him about his new clothes. He replied, ‘It’s an outfit I’m not used to, but perhaps something inside me pushed me to wear it.'”

Mohammad al-Akhras, a photojournalist working with CGTN, the English-language news channel of state-run China Global Television Network, remembered Ahmed as “a kind, gentle and deeply principled person who brought a cheerful spirit to his colleagues”.

“He worked with genuine passion, and his ultimate goal in his coverage was to convey the people’s message and their suffering.”

“He always spoke of martyrdom and paradise. Whenever we jokingly asked him, ‘Don’t you want to get married? Don’t you want us to celebrate you?’ he would simply reply, ‘My wedding will be in paradise.’ He attained exactly what he asked for.”

“As journalists, we walk this path of martyrdom because the Israeli targeting of the press has become a systematic routine,” al-Akhras said.

“The occupation wants to assassinate the image, assassinate the truth and obscure reality.”

‘Smearing of killed Palestinian journalists’

In a statement to the AFP news agency on Saturday, an Israeli military spokesman accused Ahmed Wishah, without providing evidence, of being a “Hamas terrorist”.

In a statement, Al Jazeera refuted that accusation as “baseless”, saying the Israeli military has “relentlessly spread false allegations” against its staff to “justify its crimes against Al Jazeera journalists and cameramen in Gaza”.

“These attempts deceive no one and cannot obscure the truth witnessed by the world,” the media network said, calling it a “smear campaign”.

The Committee to Protect Journalists has previously condemned Israel’s “smearing of killed Palestinian journalists”. The press freedom group said it had documented a pattern of Israel “accusing journalists of being terrorists without producing credible evidence”.

In its statement on Saturday, Al Jazeera said it is determined “to take every available legal measure to prosecute the perpetrators” of the “crimes” against its staff in Gaza.

It added that it remains committed to covering events in the enclave despite the Israeli military’s “attempts to silence the voice of truth”.

Source: Hormuz Strait Won’t Reopen Unless Israel Is Restrained in Lebanon

June 21, 2026 - 15:28

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – A source close to Iran’s negotiating team said the Strait of Hormuz will remain closed unless Israel’s actions in Lebanon are brought under control, stressing that lifting the maritime blockade alone would not be sufficient to restore passage through the strategic waterway.

“If Israel’s crimes in Lebanon continue and Lebanon’s territorial integrity is not guaranteed, no negotiations on other issues will take place,” the source close to the Iranian negotiating team told Tasnim on Sunday.

“As explicitly stated in Clause 13 (of the Islamabad MoU), failure by the United States to fulfill its commitment under Clause 1 means that Clause 5 will also not be implemented, and this means that the Strait of Hormuz will not be reopened,” the source added.

According to the informed source, the release of part of Iran’s assets under the memorandum of understanding, as well as the understanding reached with the Qataris — both at this initial stage — together with implementation of Clause 1 regarding the end of war on all fronts, including Lebanon, the complete lifting of the blockade, and the issuance of waivers for the sale of Iranian oil, petrochemicals, and derivatives, are conditions for reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

“Lifting maritime blockade against Iran alone is not sufficient for reopening the Strait of Hormuz under Clause 5,” the source stated.

Lebanon Tops Agenda in Iran-US Talks in Switzerland: Al Mayadeen

By Al Mayadeen English

Al Mayadeen's Geneva bureau chief confirms that Lebanon is expected to dominate the Iran-US talks in Switzerland later today.

Al Mayadeen's Geneva Bureau chief reported on Sunday that various bilateral and trilateral meetings have begun at the Bürgenstock resort as preparations continue ahead of the first official session of Iran-US talks. 

He added that the opening session is scheduled to take place at 2:30 PM al-Quds time.

The first file to be discussed after the inaugural session was the implementation of the first clause, which relates to ending the war, particularly on Lebanon, he further added.

Al Mayadeen's Geneva bureau chief later reported that the Iranian delegation held talks with the Qatari delegation in Geneva to discuss the ceasefire in Lebanon, adding that the negotiations are scheduled to conclude later today, in line with the agreed agenda.

He also reported that, following a meeting with the Iranian delegation, Pakistani Prime Minister and Chief of Army Staff are holding talks with the US delegation, headed by Vice President JD Vance.

Ending Israeli war on Lebanon top priority: Iranian official to CNN

Sources had similarly told CNN earlier today that the talks will begin with an emergency session on Lebanon.

On a related note, an Iranian official had told CNN on Saturday that ending the Israeli war on Lebanon is "the most important item on the Iranian delegation's agenda."

Before departing for Switzerland, US Vice President JD Vance said that one of the top concerns included in the talks would be to make progress towards a ceasefire in Lebanon. 

"I think we're going to hopefully make progress on the nuclear issue, make progress on the Lebanon ceasefire issue. Those are the two big things that I think we're going to be focused on," the US vice president told reporters, noting that he expected to participate in the talks for only "a day or two."

Iran position firm against aggression on Lebanon

Iran's Foreign Ministry gave a stern warning to Washington earlier, stating that the US should rein in "Israel" to stop its attacks on Lebanon. 

It stated that the Islamic Republic fully complied with its own obligations under the Memorandum of Understanding and expects the US to hold up its part as well, specifically regarding the Israeli aggressions on Lebanon. 

"We did not sign the memorandum so that it isn't applied and abided by," the Ministry spokesperson said. "Our philosophy is adherence in return for adherence."

Iran's position was made clear: if the US fails to hold true to its end of the conditions included in the MoU, Tehran will respond with "the necessary measures."

The Ministry further warned that "if the other party does not perform its full commitments and does not take the necessary measures as soon as possible, the entire memorandum is at stake."

Hormuz closed in solidarity

Similar to the Foreign Ministry's threats, the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters announced on Saturday the closure of the Strait of Hormuz in response to the Israeli aggressions on Lebanon, increasing pressure on Washington to reel back "Israel".

"In light of the United States’ blatant violation of its commitments and breach of the provisions of Article One of the memorandum of understanding to end the war and in response to the ongoing and continuous violation of the ceasefire by the Israeli entity in southern Lebanon, the continued brutal killing and forcible displacement of the Lebanese people, and its failure to withdraw from southern Lebanon, it is hereby announced that the Strait of Hormuz will be closed to maritime navigation," the statement read.

Regarding the Lebanon front, Hezbollah continues to defend Lebanese land against invading Israeli forces in South Lebanon. 

Israeli media continued to report on casualties among the occupation's army's ranks as it faces sustained resistance from Hezbollah. 

A recent report states that the IOF sustained 14 casualties overnight Saturday following multiple operations carried out by the Lebanese Resistance. This comes a day after Hezbollah carried out a decisive operation, which killed four Israeli troops, including a senior armored corps commander. 

Exclusive: Resistance Ambushes IOF at Ali al-Taher, 15+ Casualties

By Al Mayadeen English

Resistance fighters ambushed an Israeli commando force at Ali al-Taher Hill at dawn Saturday, killing and wounding over 15 troops, Al Mayadeen's field sources say.

Resistance fighters in southern Lebanon set up and executed a tight ambush against an Israeli commando infantry force attempting to infiltrate the Ali al-Taher Hill at dawn on Saturday, killing and wounding more than 15 Israeli officers and soldiers, according to Al Mayadeen's field sources.

The Israeli force had been under close surveillance by Resistance fighters in the lead-up to the operation. When the troops reached the prepared ambush site, fighters engaged them at close range in clashes that lasted more than two hours, the sources said.

The ground engagement was accompanied by missile and attack-drone strikes targeting the rear of the advancing Israeli force.

As the ambush unfolded, Israeli troops saturated the area with smoke shells and carried out airstrikes in an attempt to evacuate their dead and wounded, according to the same sources.

Operations Room warning 'translated into action'

Al Mayadeen's field sources stressed that the operation made clear that the Resistance's warnings were backed by action on the ground.

Its Operations Room had previously warned that the Ali al-Taher Hill would remain beyond the reach of the Israeli occupation, a warning the sources confirmed was carried out overnight when fighters struck the advancing Israeli force.

The sources added that the coming days may prove increasingly difficult for the occupation as long as it remains on Lebanese land.

Field information contradicts Israeli claims of control

Corroborating what the field sources said, Al Mayadeen's correspondent in South Lebanon explained that over the past four days, the occupation has deployed forces from several brigades, including armored, commando, and Givati brigades, backed by intense air and ground firepower.

The Resistance has repelled every attempt to advance and inflicted heavy losses on Israeli forces, with more than 10 Israeli officers and soldiers killed, according to sources cited by our correspondent.

Our correspondent stressed that Israeli forces have also targeted civilians in their homes across several towns in southern Lebanon and the Bekaa in an attempt to obscure the occupation's failure and mounting losses.

Field information confirms that Israeli forces have so far been unable to advance due to the Resistance's response, he concluded.

Pezeshkian: $6 bln Iranian Funds in Qatar Set for Release

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Agencies

Iranian President Pezeshkian confirms $6 billion in Iranian funds held in Qatar will be released, and that Trump acknowledged Iran's rights in his latest speech.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Sunday that every provision of the memorandum of understanding with Washington serves Tehran's interests, adding that the outcomes of the negotiations "will become clear" in time.

Speaking at a Monetary and Banking Policy Conference, Pezeshkian confirmed that $6 billion in Iranian funds held in Qatar will be released. He added that US President Donald Trump, who had previously sought to deny Iran its rights, acknowledged those rights in his most recent speech.

Washington's only condition, Pezeshkian explained, is that Iran does not possess an atomic bomb, noting that Tehran never sought a nuclear weapon, "as the martyred Leader, Sayyed Ali Khamenei, repeatedly stressed."

He also said that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was the first to voice dissatisfaction with the negotiations.

Talks ongoing in Geneva

Pezeshkian's remarks coincided with a fresh round of diplomatic meetings in Geneva, including bilateral and trilateral formats at the Bürgenstock resort, ahead of the first official session of US-Iran negotiations.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei told IRNA that Tehran would hold morning bilateral meetings with the Pakistani and Qatari delegations as mediators, followed by four-party talks in the afternoon between the Iranian and US delegations alongside Qatari and Pakistani representatives.

Iranian state television reported that the talks aim to set the mechanism for the main session with the US side, with Tehran insisting on its core demand, namely ending the war on all fronts, including in Lebanon, where it stresses this provision remains unfulfilled.

Frozen assets of central importance

The $6 billion figure traces to a mechanism the US and Qatar had reportedly been developing to give Iran access to frozen funds for "humanitarian" purchases such as food and medicine, under Qatari oversight, as part of measures linked to the ceasefire agreement.

It marks only an initial step, as the same sources said Tehran is seeking access to at least $24 billion in blocked funds, out of an estimated $100 billion in Iranian assets frozen worldwide.

The asset issue gained momentum after Trump, speaking in Evian on June 17, said Washington would eventually have to return Iran's frozen funds, arguing that withholding them indefinitely would erode global confidence in the dollar.

"It's not our money, it's their money," Trump said. Trump also claimed the US holds enough leverage to enforce the Lebanon ceasefire, calling it a "much smaller conflict," even as Lebanon continues to face Israeli airstrikes, drone attacks, and incursions in violation of the truce.

Closed to All: IRGC Warns Ships Away from Hormuz, Cites Security Risks

By Al Mayadeen English

20 Jun 2026 18:13

Iran’s IRGC Navy says it has closed the Strait of Hormuz in response to Israeli aggression on southern Lebanon, citing ceasefire violations.

Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy has affirmed that the Strait of Hormuz is closed to all ships and naval vessels, in response to Israeli aggression.

Israeli occupation forces (IOF) carried out a fresh wave of attacks across southern Lebanon and western Bekaa on Saturday morning, killing at least 37 people and extending a pattern of aggression that has persisted despite an alleged ceasefire in place since April 17, 2026.

In a statement, the IRGC Navy cited Israeli crimes in Lebanon and Washington’s violation of its ceasefire commitments as the catalysts for the closure of the strategic waterway.

Furthermore, it has warned vessels not to approach the Strait of Hormuz, "otherwise, their security will be at risk."

Iranian naval authorities issue alerts to vessels: State TV 

Iranian television reported that Iran’s naval forces have formally closed the Strait of Hormuz to all maritime traffic, citing “repeated violations” and a “continued lack of commitment to the agreement” by unspecified parties.

In a coordinated warning, Iranian naval authorities issued alerts via media broadcasts and wireless devices to all vessels sailing or anchored in the Gulf and the strategic waterway, which is a critical chokepoint for nearly one-third of the world’s seaborne oil exports.

The state television additionally reported that the Gulf is “now emptier than it was at noon.”

The decision to shut the strait, according to the Iranian TV, was not taken lightly but was compelled by persistent transgressions in the region, particularly by "Israel", which has yet to halt its aggression on Lebanon.

“The world must know that we have never abandoned our friends, and we have always been the support and protectors of those who stand by us,” Iranian TV stated. 

Strait of Hormuz closed over Israeli aggression on Lebanon: Khatam HQ 

The Strait of Hormuz is shut down in response to ongoing Israeli aggression on southern Lebanon, Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters announced, deeming Israeli actions a violation of Iran’s agreement with the US.

In a statement carried by Iranian state television, the Khatam HQ accused the United States of breaching its obligations under a memorandum of understanding related to ending the war, and also cited continued Israeli military actions in southern Lebanon, including ceasefire violations, killings, forced displacement of civilians, and failure to withdraw from Lebanese territory. It added that the measure reflects a response to the deterioration of compliance by the opposing parties and the persistence of hostilities on the ground.

"In light of the United States’ blatant violation of its commitments and breach of the provisions of Article One of the memorandum of understanding to end the war and in response to the ongoing and continuous violation of the ceasefire by the Israeli entity in southern Lebanon, the continued brutal killing and forcible displacement of the Lebanese people, and its failure to withdraw from southern Lebanon, it is hereby announced that the Strait of Hormuz will be closed to maritime navigation," the statement read.

More steps to follow

Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters concluded by emphasizing that the measure was presented as an initial response to the enemy’s breach of commitments, warning that any continued escalation would prompt additional actions aimed at compelling compliance with its stated obligations.

"It is noted that this first step is a response to the enemy’s breach of promise, and if the aggression continues, further steps will be planned and taken to force the enemy to comply with its obligations,” it asserted.

Ethiopia's Tourism Renaissance: Bridging History, Culture and Economic Transformation

By Yordanos D. 

 Few countries can claim to tell the story of humanity itself. Ethiopia can.

From the fossilized remains of some of the earliest human ancestors to ancient kingdoms that once stood among the great civilizations of the world, Ethiopia possesses a historical depth and cultural richness found nowhere else. Home to UNESCO World Heritage sites, dramatic mountain landscapes, vibrant traditions, and diverse communities, the country has long held the ingredients of a world-class tourism destination.

Yet for much of its modern history, Ethiopia’s tourism potential remained largely untapped. Infrastructure gaps, limited international promotion, investment constraints, and recurring geopolitical challenges prevented the sector from realizing its full economic and social value.

Today, however, Ethiopia is undergoing one of the most ambitious tourism transformations on the African continent.

What was once viewed primarily as a destination for history enthusiasts and adventurous travelers is evolving into a multifaceted tourism economy that blends heritage, nature, culture, business travel, and modern urban experiences. Across the country, historic landmarks are being restored, new destinations are emerging, green spaces are transforming cities, and tourism is increasingly being recognized as a strategic pillar of national development.

 Today, that historical trajectory has decisively shifted. The country is steadily repositioning itself from a niche, largely heritage-based destination into a robust, diversified tourism economy that seamlessly integrates ancient culture, breathtaking nature, modern conference tourism, and dynamic urban experiences.

 Historical Context

To understand Ethiopia's tourism potential, one must first grasp the sheer depth of its historical footprint. Unlike many destinations where tourism is built around manufactured attractions, Ethiopia’s core offering is its authenticity and its status as a cradle of human civilization.

Ethiopia’s global tourism narrative begins at the dawn of humanity. The Lower Valley of the Awash, a UNESCO World Heritage site, is globally renowned for the discovery of "Lucy", the 3.2-million-year-old hominid skeleton that radically reshaped our understanding of human evolution. Tourism development in this sphere is transitioning from purely academic expeditions to accessible educational tourism, supported by modern facilities like the Ethiopian Science Museum and enhanced exhibits at the National Museum in Addis Ababa.

 The ancient city of Aksum, the heart of the Aksumite Empire, was once considered one of the four greatest powers of the ancient world, alongside Rome, Persia, and China. Today, visitors are drawn to its towering, monolithic obelisks, ancient royal tombs, and the Church, the resting place of the biblical Ark of the Covenant.

 Further south, the city of Gondar showcases the architectural prowess of the 17th-century Solomonic dynasty. The Fasil Ghebbi royal enclosure features majestic castles, banqueting halls, and bathhouses that reflect a unique synthesis of Ethiopian architectural influences.

 Besides, the eleven rock-hewn churches, carved entirely out of solid volcanic tuff in the 12th century by King Lalibela, remain a masterclass in ancient engineering and spiritual devotion. As an active pilgrimage site, Lalibela offers tourists not just a view of ancient ruins, but an immersion into a living, breathing spiritual tradition that has remained virtually unchanged for centuries.

 Ethiopia’s prominent UNESCO World Heritage sites represent a rich ray of history, nature, and spirituality, starting with the iconic Rock-Hewn Churches of Lalibela. Classified as a cultural heritage site, this architectural marvel features breathtaking 12th-century monolithic churches carved directly out of volcanic rock, serving as a powerful magnet for spiritual tourism. 

 Beyond these imperial and spiritual centers, the country boasts sites of profound scientific and natural significance. The Lower Valley of the Awash is a unique natural and cultural hybrid site famous globally as the discovery location of ancient hominid fossils like "Lucy," making it a premier destination for paleoanthropology and educational tourism. For nature lovers and adventure seekers, Simien National Park offers a purely natural escape characterized by dramatic, jagged mountain landscapes and rare, endemic wildlife, establishing itself as a world-class hub for trekking and wildlife photography. Finally, the cultural site of Harar Jugol captures the imagination as a historic, fortified Islamic city that offers deep cultural immersion and the famous, unique tradition of nighttime hyena feeding.

 Modern Paradigm Shift

Since 2018, Ethiopia has pursued an aggressive and broad tourism transformation agenda that systematically combines infrastructure expansion, destination development, heritage restoration, and urban renewal. The government has recognized that passive promotion is no longer sufficient; active, structured destination development is required to unlock economic value.

 Tourism is now firmly entrenched as a strategic pillar of Ethiopia’s long-term macroeconomic development strategy. Globally, the Ethiopia travel and tourism sector is   one of the most dynamic, resilient, and inclusive industries. The country’s reform agenda has aggressively targeted this metric, aiming to align its national outputs with global averages. 

 The sector is proving its capacity to support diverse employment across hospitality, agriculture, transport, traditional handicrafts, and modern entertainment, creating broad-based economic linkages that benefit both urban centers and rural communities.

Redefinition of Addis Ababa

 One of the most visible, striking, and immediate dimensions of Ethiopia's tourism transformation has been the radical redefinition of Addis Ababa. Historically viewed by many international travelers merely as a diplomatic hub or a mandatory transit layover en route to the historical north or the Omo Valley in the south, the capital is successfully evolving into a premier tourism destination in its own right.

 Developed within the previously highly restricted confines of the Grand National Palace complex, Unity Park represents a masterstroke of urban and historical tourism. The park has opened the doors of the nation’s royal and political history to the general public. It seamlessly combines state-of-the-art museums, meticulously manicured botanical gardens, restored heritage buildings and a modern zoo. Unity Park serves as a microcosm of Ethiopia, with pavilions dedicated to the diverse cultural regions of the country, allowing tourists to experience the breadth of the nation within the capital.

Alongside historical restoration, urban greening has taken center stage. Friendship Park has miraculously transformed previously neglected, unused, and degraded urban land in the heart of the city into a sprawling, major green space designed for leisure, public gatherings, and cultural festivals.

This is part of the broader "Beautifying Sheger" mega-project, which has reshaped large swaths of Addis Ababa through aggressive river restoration, the creation of green corridors, the construction of pedestrian walkways, and the development of recreational spaces. This not only drastically improves the environmental quality and public health of the city but significantly enhances its attractiveness to international visitors, expatriates, and foreign investors.

 Moreover, the Entoto Mountains have been transformed into Entoto Park, elevating eco-recreation tourism to new heights. Set within dense eucalyptus forests at high altitude, the park features world-class hiking trails, dedicated cycling routes, horseback riding, ziplining, archery ranges, and premium hospitality services, including luxury lodges and artisanal coffee shops. Entoto offers panoramic, breathtaking views of the sprawling metropolis below, providing an accessible escape to nature without leaving the city limits.

 Together, these monumental urban developments are successfully reshaping Addis Ababa, the capital city of the Ethiopia, into a destination capable of supporting longer tourist stays, thereby increasing per-capita tourist spending and boosting the local urban economy.

"Dine for Nation" 

While the transformation of the capital has been spectacular, the Ethiopian government recognizes that true sustainable tourism must be decentralized. To this end, the highly innovative “Dine for Nation” initiative was launched to expand cutting-edge tourism development into remote and historically underfunded regional areas.

 Located on the northern shore of Lake Tana, the source of the Blue Nile and the largest lake in Ethiopia, Gorgora is being transformed into a world-class lakeside resort destination. Historically significant as an early capital of the Ethiopian empire before the rise of Gondar, Gorgora offers a mix of medieval monasteries, rich birdlife, and serene waterscapes. The new development projects are integrating luxury eco-lodges with community-based water sports and historical tours, breathing new economic life into the Amhara region.

 Similarly, situated in the Oromia region, Wonchi is a stunning, high-altitude crater lake surrounded by lush alpine vegetation, hot springs, and breathtaking valleys. Previously accessible only to the most determined off-road travelers, the Dine for Nation initiative is developing sustainable access roads, eco-friendly viewing platforms, and community-managed lodges. This development is meticulously designed to protect the fragile local ecosystem while opening it up to high-value, low-impact eco-tourism.

 In the deep southwest of Ethiopia, the Koysha project is perhaps the most ambitious. Set against the backdrop of the massive Koysha hydroelectric dam currently under construction on the Omo River, this initiative is creating an integrated eco-tourism and cultural destination in a region known for its incredible biodiversity and indigenous cultural richness.

 These projects are designed with a dual mandate. First, they aim to attract a new demographic of eco-tourists and luxury travelers. Second, and more importantly, they are vital tools for redistributing tourism-driven economic benefits. By stimulating regional macroeconomic growth, creating thousands of rural jobs in construction and hospitality, and tying economic value to the preservation of local environments, these projects strengthen national environmental conservation efforts.

Intangible Culture 

Ethiopia’s tourism identity remains deeply rooted not just in its physical sites, but in its living, breathing cultural heritage. The nation's intangible cultural assets are massive draws for global visitors.

 Ethiopia's religious and cultural festivals are unparalleled in their scale and vibrancy. Timkat (Epiphany), Meskel (the finding of the True Cross), and Irreecha (the Oromo thanksgiving festival) draw tens of thousands of international visitors annually. These are not staged events for tourists, but profound, authentic expressions of local faith and culture. The government has been working to improve crowd management, visitor facilities, and digital broadcasting of these events to maximize their tourism potential while respecting their sanctity.

As the undisputed birthplace of Coffea arabica, Ethiopia has an unmatched opportunity in the rapidly growing global market for culinary and agricultural tourism. Coffee is not just a crop; it is the lifeblood of the culture, epitomized by the traditional Ethiopian coffee ceremony. Initiatives are underway to develop "Coffee Routes" in the southern and western highlands including Kaffa, Yirgacheffe and Sidama, which are allowing tourists to trace the journey of coffee from the forest canopy to the cup, engaging with local farmers, and partaking in traditional roasting ceremonies.

 Being recognizant of the need to develop a bridge to connect the gap between ancient history and contemporary identity, the Ethiopian government has been investing heavily in modern museums. Located in the heart of Addis Ababa, this monumental facility commemorates the 1896 Battle of Adwa, where Ethiopian forces decisively defeated the invading Italian army, securing the nation's independence. 

 It serves as a beacon of Pan-African pride and a major draw for diaspora and heritage tourists. This architectural marvel is a showcase to the commitment of Ethiopia to the future, focusing on technology, ecology, and innovation, adding a completely new dimension to the nation's cultural landscape.

 The Engine of Connectivity

Ethiopian Airlines is the largest and most profitable airline in Africa. With a rapidly expanding network of more than 140 international destinations across five continents, the airline seamlessly connects Ethiopia to major global markets in the Americas, Europe, Asia, and the rest of Africa. Bole International Airport brings millions of transit passengers through Addis Ababa each year.

 Another incredibly fast-growing segment is conference tourism. Addis Ababa is the unquestioned diplomatic capital of Africa, serving as the headquarters for the African Union (AU) and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), alongside dozens of other international NGOs and embassies.

Addis Ababa is increasingly positioned as a premier continental hub for meetings, summits, and massive exhibitions. Recent industry figures indicate that the country hosted more than 60 major international conferences within a recent nine-month period. This reflects a sharply rising demand for business tourism. The MICE segment is particularly valuable to the national economy because business travelers typically generate significantly higher daily visitor spending than leisure tourists. Furthermore, they support a wide, complex range of service industries, including high-end catering, translation services, corporate transport, and event management.

 Domestic Tourism Awakening

For decades, the Ethiopian tourism sector was heavily skewed toward catering to international arrivals. However, a highly encouraging and strategic shift is currently underway: the rapid expansion of domestic tourism.

 Increasing numbers of Ethiopian families, university students, and young corporate professionals are traveling within their own borders to visit historical and cultural sites, the newly developed urban parks, and distant regional destinations. This growing internal movement is driven by an expanding middle class, improved road networks, and a concerted marketing effort to foster a sense of national pride and exploration.

 The strategic benefits of domestic tourism include economic stability, cultural cohesion, and year-round revenue. It provides a vital buffer against the volatility of international travel, which is highly susceptible to global pandemics, economic downturns, or geopolitical tensions. Internal travel strengthens cross-cultural awareness and social cohesion within a highly diverse, multi-ethnic nation.

 Sustainability and Data-Driven Development

As the sector expands at a breakneck pace, sustainability has become increasingly central to Ethiopia's tourism transformation strategy. The government is acutely aware that unchecked tourism can lead to environmental degradation and the commodification of culture.

 To move away from guesswork and anecdotal planning, Ethiopia has developed a robust Tourism Satellite Account with the technical and financial support of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA). This statistical framework aligns with UNWTO standards, radically improving data-driven planning. 

 Inclusivity is also a major pillar of the new tourism policy. Community-based tourism initiatives are expected to grow significantly, particularly in ecologically sensitive areas like the Simien and Bale Mountains, and culturally sensitive areas like the Omo Valley. These initiatives guarantee that local, indigenous populations directly benefit from the influx of travelers. 

 In conclusion, Ethiopia’s comparative advantage remains undeniably strong, built upon a rare, virtually impossible-to-replicate combination of immense historical depth, staggering geographic diversity, unparalleled continental aviation connectivity, and profound cultural richness.

 The country’s tourism story is therefore still unfolding. What is clearly emerging from the data, the infrastructure projects, and the policy shifts is not merely isolated sectoral growth, but a much broader, profound national transformation in exactly how Ethiopia presents itself to the world.

 Tourism is no longer a peripheral economic activity; it is increasingly becoming the strongest bridge between the country’s ancient, glorious identity and its modern, dynamic ambitions. By continuously investing in its heritage, protecting its natural landscapes, expanding its urban amenities, and empowering its local communities, Ethiopia is flawlessly positioning itself for a significantly more visible, highly competitive, and globally respected role in the international tourism landscape. The land of origins is finally claiming its rightful place as the destination of the future.

Africa Must Invest Own Funds in Ebola Response, Says CDC Head

The Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director-General Jean Kaseya speaks to the Associated Press during an interview in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, June 19, 2026

Ethiopia

The head of Africa’s Centers For Disease Control says the continent needs to invest its own funds in Ebola response.

The current outbreak has already claimed more than 200 lives and some 900 people are confirmed to have been infected.

The number of actual cases is believed to be higher because the outbreak was confirmed weeks late.

Response efforts have been challenged by the lack of an approved vaccine or treatment for the Bundibugyo virus driving the current outbreak.

“If this outbreak was in Europe, was in the US, or other continent, other places, they would already develop vaccine and medicine," Dr. Jean Kaseya, Director-General of Africa CDC, said at the CDC headquarters in Addis Ababa.

"For them they don't find interest, it's not their disease, they don't find interest, they are not, it's not their people who are dying, and I think this is also a wake-up for Africans. We need to take care of ourselves, we need to say it's time for us to really think strongly about how we can start to manufacturing medicines and vaccines to respond to our needs.”

Recent health shocks, including the COVID-19 pandemic, have triggered efforts to boost vaccine production in Africa, but little has yet been achieved. While efforts are in place to speed up the development of vaccines and diagnostics, Kaseya said he is unsure a vaccine will be available by the end of the year.

He added that the peak of the Ebola outbreak is still to come because of slow progress in identifying and monitoring contacts.

Officials have yet to identify the outbreak’s patient zero and still need to trace more than 36,000 people who have come in contact with infected individuals, Kaseya said.

UK Law Enforcement Destroyed My Reputation and Integrity, Ex-Nigerian Oil Minister Tells BBC

Steve Swann

Society reporter

BBC Former Nigeria oil minister Diezani Alison-Madueke, 65, at the BBC for an exclusive interview. She is wearing a jacket with a head-band over long straight hair.BBC

Diezani Alison-Madueke was the first female president of the oil exporters' group Opec

A former Nigerian oil minister cleared of taking bribes says the UK authorities destroyed her reputation in a failed prosecution that was "painful and traumatic".

Diezani Alison-Madueke said the 13-year investigation by the National Crime Agency (NCA) "could have been handled a lot differently".

Speaking exclusively to the BBC, she said: "I've not been allowed to travel. I've not been allowed to work. They destroyed my reputation and my integrity."

On Wednesday the former minister was found not guilty at Southwark Crown Court of five counts of accepting bribes and conspiracy to commit bribery in a trial that began in January.

Alison-Madueke, 65, was Nigeria's oil minister between 2010 and 2015 and the first female president of the oil exporters' group Opec.

"When your freedom is taken away from you…it has a very deep impact upon you psychologically," she said.

"I knew that I had never done anything nefarious and I had never done any of the heinous things I was being accused of doing."

Alison-Madueke, who was first arrested in 2015, but not charged until 2023, was accused of receiving kickbacks from wealthy oil tycoons with government contracts who provided her with "a life of luxury".

The alleged bribes included £2m ($2.65m) worth of goods from Harrods, chauffeur-driven cars and the use of multi-million-pound properties in London and Buckinghamshire.

'There's a bit of blame everywhere'

But from the start of the trial in January, defence lawyers questioned the fairness of the prosecution's case, suggesting vital documents that proved Alison-Madueke's innocence had gone missing in Nigeria.

She says these included boxes of receipts showing the oil tycoons had been reimbursed for payments made on her behalf.

"Those items were taken away by our intelligence forces" from her home in Abuja in 2015, she said, adding that she had no idea what happened to them.

Former Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan, who appointed Alison-Madueke, wrote to the court to say third parties would often pay for transport and accommodation for ministers on overseas business.

Asked who she holds responsible for the failings in the case against her, Alison-Madueke said: "There's a bit of blame everywhere."

"The Nigerian authorities need to look into the processes and practices that they deploy in these cases."

The BBC has asked the Nigerian government for comment.

As for the NCA, she said: "The long arm of the law when you go into other countries, particularly in politically motivated cases, needs to have a lot more sensitivity."

Nigeria is Africa's largest oil producer

She believes the agency went after her because she was "low-hanging fruit", ignoring the work she says she did to counter corruption in the oil industry and the fact she had made powerful enemies in Nigeria, Africa's largest oil producer.

"I was the first female to enter this sort of position as petroleum minister and as head of Opec in a very misogynistic society."

The NCA should have "taken a step back and looked with a little more depth at the truth of the situation on the ground," she said.

An NCA spokesperson told the BBC the agency had "conducted a long-running, in depth and complex investigation which was regularly reviewed throughout its duration by CPS [Crown Prosecution Service] and the investigators".

The spokesperson added that the NCA had "worked closely with international partners and, as in all cases, this investigation was carried out with impartiality".

"A comprehensive file of evidence was presented to the CPS who authorised charges and we respect the decision of the jury in court."

Alison-Madueke's older brother Doye Agamas, 69, an archbishop in a Pentecostal church in Manchester was also acquitted of conspiracy to commit bribery.

Oil industry executive Olatimbo Ayinde, 54, was found not guilty of bribery and bribery of a foreign public official. She had faced prosecution despite being an informant in an anti-corruption investigation by the Nigerian authorities.

In 2023 the US Justice Department recovered $53m (£40m) worth of assets seized from two of the oil tycoons named in this trial.

In a statement at the time a department spokesperson said "Alison-Madueke used her influence to steer lucrative oil contracts" to companies owned by the men.

On this point, Alison-Madueke told the BBC: "I was never given the opportunity to fight that because I wasn't even charged" and that the contracts were subject to "the exact due process that they are supposed to go through."

Nigeria's anti-graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) says it also recovered about $153m and more than 80 properties from the politician in 2022.

Asked about this, she replied: "The assets that have been forfeited were not actually traced directly to me... I don't know what has happened to these matters at all. It's now that I'll have the freedom to find out what exactly has gone on there."

Deaths Surge in DR Congo Displacement Camp Amid Ebola Fears

By Al Mayadeen English

20 Jun 2026 09:55

At least 30 people have died in a displacement camp in eastern Congo, raising fears of undetected Ebola transmission as aid cuts worsen sanitation and healthcare conditions.

At least 30 people have died since the beginning of May in a displacement camp in northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo, raising fears that Ebola may be spreading undetected among vulnerable communities already struggling with conflict, displacement, and deteriorating living conditions.

The deaths were reported in Kigonze camp near Bunia, the epicenter of the country's current Ebola outbreak. Camp officials described the mortality rate as unprecedented, noting that residents had previously experienced only a handful of deaths each month.

Despite mounting concerns, the exact causes of death remain unconfirmed. Residents and relatives of victims had refused medical testing of both the living and the deceased until Thursday, according to camp representatives and humanitarian workers.

Several local sources told Reuters that many of the victims displayed symptoms commonly associated with Ebola, including fever, headaches, and vomiting.

"People didn't just die like this before," camp spokesperson Desire Grodya Bapi told Reuters.

The surge in fatalities has heightened concerns that the virus could be circulating among displaced populations without detection, complicating efforts to contain the outbreak.

Health workers struggle to contain potential spread

Health officials and aid organizations have encountered significant obstacles in their attempts to investigate the deaths and monitor possible transmission.

Camp President Dz'djo Ndrutsi Etienne said ten people were buried during a single week, while aid workers described witnessing multiple bodies awaiting burial, including children and a pregnant woman.

Footage verified by Reuters showed health workers wearing protective suits disinfecting bodies and preparing coffins as grieving relatives gathered nearby.

According to Catholic aid organization Caritas, repeated efforts to persuade families to allow medical inspections of victims were initially rejected.

"Our team tried to persuade people to accept doctors to inspect the bodies. They completely refused," said Justin Zanamuzi, director of Caritas.

Health workers have since collected samples from several victims, though results were still pending at the time of reporting. Officials noted that cholera can produce similar symptoms and spread rapidly in communities with inadequate sanitation.

Humanitarian crisis fuels disease risks

The outbreak is unfolding amid one of Africa's largest displacement crises.

Eastern Congo hosts millions of displaced civilians who have fled years of armed conflict and instability. Many camps are overcrowded, with families sharing cramped shelters and lacking access to adequate sanitation infrastructure.

Kato Lonu, a camp resident who lost two children, including a six-month-old infant, said families were witnessing deaths on an almost daily basis.

"These are conditions that no human being should have to live in. If you look around, people are dying one after another," he said.

Aid workers reported that children move through muddy pathways barefoot while families live in tents separated by less than a meter, conditions that create an environment conducive to the spread of infectious disease.

Aid cuts deepen public health emergency

Humanitarian organizations say the growing health emergency has been exacerbated by reductions in international funding for water, sanitation, and hygiene programs, commonly known as WASH services.

Several aid workers told Reuters that cuts by major donors have weakened the capacity of humanitarian agencies to prevent outbreaks and respond to emerging health threats.

United Nations data shows that funding for sanitation infrastructure in Congo fell sharply between 2024 and 2025, dropping to roughly $38 million. This year's broader funding appeal remains only 21% funded.

In Kigonze, residents and aid workers reported a shortage of toilets, many of which overflow regularly.

"The latrines, they fill up very quickly, and people have to empty them themselves, with their bare hands," Grodya said.

Several international organizations, including Mercy Corps, the Danish Refugee Council, CARE International, and Oxfam, reported scaling back or ending US-funded sanitation projects in Ebola-affected areas following funding reductions.

Mercy Corps said that while its programs served more than 125,000 displaced people in 2024 through dozens of water points and hundreds of public toilets, current funding levels support only a fraction of those services.

Aid groups warn that deteriorating sanitation conditions could accelerate the spread of diseases such as Ebola and cholera among displaced communities already facing severe humanitarian hardships.

Ghana Pushes for Concrete Slavery Reparations

Accra (AFP) – Ghana hosted a landmark global conference on Thursday seeking to translate growing political support for slavery reparations into practical commitments towards justice.

Issued on: 18/06/2026 - 20:16

The conference, which brought together leaders from around Africa and the Caribbean, comes after the United Nations adopted a historic resolution that declared the transatlantic slave trade "the gravest crime against humanity".

Since the resolution's adoption in March, the campaign for reparations has gathered "unprecedented momentum", said Ghana's Foreign Minister Samuel Ablakwa.

While non-binding, the resolution -- pushed for by Ghanaian President John Mahama -- goes beyond simple acknowledgement and asks nations involved in the slave trade to engage in "restitution" and "compensation".

"We won the battle against slavery, we won the battle against colonialism, we won the battle against apartheid, and we are confident that we shall win the battle against reparatory injustice," Ablakwa told the conference.

The adoption of the UN resolution marked the strongest endorsement yet by the international community of the case for reparations, garnering the support of 123 UN member states.

Since then, French President Emmanuel Macron has endorsed the symbolic repeal of royal decrees that governed slavery in French colonies. He has said the issue of reparations must be addressed, while warning against making "false promises".

Speaking to the Accra conference by video, Macron said history cannot be "reduced to a merely financial logic".

The French were the third-largest slave traders in Europe, after the British and the Portuguese.

Pope Leo XIV last month issued an apology for the Catholic Church's centuries-long delay in condemning slavery, calling it "a wound in Christian memory".

"The growing international support for these conversations demonstrates that reparatory justice is no longer a peripheral issue," Ghana's foreign minister said.

'Beyond symbolism'

Once considered a hub of the transatlantic slave trade, Ghana is now "transitioning from being a crime scene to a sanctuary for healing and reparative justice", Ablakwa told hundreds of delegates.

The west African country has been at the forefront of connecting people in the diaspora to Africa, granting Ghanaian citizenship to more than 1,000 people in recent years.

Mahama announced the creation of three working panels to explore practical pathways to reparatory justice.

One will be an advisory panel led by heads of state, another a group of experts focused on restitution, and a third examining the legal aspects of reparations.

"The question before us is not whether history can be changed -- it cannot -- but whether we have the courage to confront it honestly and the determination to turn recognition into meaningful action," said Mahama.

The line-up of speakers at the three-day event included the leaders of Barbados, Sierra Leone, Senegal, Namibia and Liberia, alongside Nigerian Nobel literature prize winner and global rights activist Wole Soyinka.

Soyinka said reparation "must go beyond symbolism".

"It is not merely about apology or compensation -- it is about the rehumanisation of memory and the restoration of values that were distorted by centuries of dehumanisation," he said.

He also cautioned about seeking justice for the past without confronting current failures, "including the ways in which we still commodify human lives on this continent today", citing the kidnapping of school children for ransom, a common crime in his home country.

Conference participant Mariam Abdoulaye, from Burkina Faso, told AFP Africa expects reparations in the form of "structured compensation funds to governments or communities" from former colonial powers or institutions linked to slavery, as well as debt cancellation or restructuring and the return of looted artefacts.

African, Caribbean States Back Slavery Reparations Plan at Ghana Meeting

By Emmanuel Bruce

June 19, 2026

Ghana hosts conference on slavery reparations

Ghana's President John Dramani Mahama, Barbados' Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley and other dignitaries attend a wreath-laying event at the Christiansborg Castle, a former slave post, during a high-level consultative conference on the next steps to the landmark United Nations resolution on the trafficking of enslaved Africans

Summary

African, Caribbean countries demand formal apology for slavery

Ghana meeting follows U.N. resolution calling for reparations

ACCRA, June 19 (Reuters) - African and Caribbean nations on Friday demanded formal apologies from countries that benefited from transatlantic slavery, as well ​as debt relief and financial compensation, part of an increasingly forceful push for reparations.

The demands were part ‌of a 19-point reparations plan endorsed at the end of a three-day conference in Ghana, whose U.N. resolution recognising transatlantic slavery as the "gravest crime against humanity" was approved in March despite resistance from Europe and the United States, countries which have a legacy in the sprawling human trafficking system that saw ​millions forcibly taken from their homelands.

The plan was adopted by the African Union and the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Commission on ​Reparatory Justice. It does not mention which specific countries should apologise.

It calls for the establishment of a ⁠Global Reparations Fund, comprehensive debt relief and cancellation for affected countries and reforms to international financial institutions to ensure fairer ​representation for nations in the Global South.

It also calls for the restitution of looted cultural property and ancestral remains, climate justice financing ​and steps to address the specific brutalities inflicted on African women and girls during slavery.

And it urges African countries to grant the right of return and citizenship pathways for diaspora Africans while committing to preserving the coastal forts and castles as memorials.

The U.N. resolution in March was passed with ​123 votes in favour, but the United States, Israel and 52 other countries —including European Union members and Britain — either opposed or ​abstained.

Both the EU and the U.S. voiced concerns the resolution could imply a hierarchy among crimes against humanity, treating some as more serious ‌than others.

RESPONSIBILITY, ⁠NOT GUILT

At least 12.5 million Africans were kidnapped and forcibly transported by European ships between the 15th and 19th centuries. Advocates say action is needed to confront enduring legacies, including racism and economic inequality.

CARICOM had previously developed its own reparations framework, while the African Union was working on a separate plan. The conference in Ghana allowed the two bodies to merge their efforts into a single ​document to be presented at ​the next U.N. General Assembly.

Addressing ⁠the conference, several leaders struck a conciliatory tone.

“None of us gathered in this hall today can be held personally responsible for the atrocities of the transatlantic slave trade,” Ghana’s President John Dramani ​Mahama told delegates. “History does not ask us to inherit guilt, but it asks us to ​inherit responsibility.”

Heads of ⁠state from Namibia, Liberia, Senegal, Barbados and Sao Tome and Principe attended, as did the vice president of Equatorial Guinea.

Speaking virtually from the Elysee Palace, French President Emmanuel Macron said enslaved people “were torn from their homelands, deported, dehumanised, and treated as goods.”

He also said reparations ⁠should not ​be seen " as an end point, or a cheque written to bring the ​story to a close.”

Last month, French lawmakers voted to formally repeal slavery-era laws that defined the legal status of enslaved people as "movable property" and justified abuse ​and corporal punishment, though they stopped short of including demands for reparations.

Reporting by Emmanuel Bruce; Editing by Robbie Corey-Boulet and Aurora Ellis

Ghana Conference Urges Slave-trade Nations to Issue Apologies and Reparations

By Edward Acquah and Wilson McMakin 

Ghana Slavery Reparations

President John Dramani Mahama lays a wreath in a ceremony to honor victims of the transatlantic slave trade at Christiansborg Castle during a Juneteenth commemoration ceremony in Accra, Ghana, on Friday.

Reuben Ekow Quansah/The Associated Press

ACCRA, Ghana — African and Caribbean leaders in Ghana on Friday urged former slave-trading nations to issue apologies and reparations over the trafficking of enslaved Africans after a landmark U.N. resolution in March declaring it “the gravest crime against humanity.”

The “Next Steps” conference in the Ghanaian capital of Accra issued a declaration calling on countries involved in the Atlantic slave trade to “offer full, formal and unconditional apologies as a foundational step towards reconciliation, trust-building and reparatory justice.”

The U.N. resolution is non-binding but carries moral authority. Organizers said the Ghana conference was aimed at moving the reparations debate from recognition to concrete measures, including moves to require compensation under international law.

About 12 million Africans were forcefully taken by traders from European nations from the 16th to the 19th century and enslaved on plantations that built wealth at the price of misery.

Ghana President John Dramani Mahama said the U.N. resolution had created a new opportunity for meaningful engagement on reparations. He said the effects of slavery continue to be felt across Africa, the Caribbean, and the wider African diaspora.

“We’re here because recognition creates responsibility, and because the enduring consequences of this history continue to demand thoughtful, coordinated, and sustained international engagement,” Mahama told delegates from more than 80 countries.

At a reparations summit in Ghana in 2023, participants proposed establishing a Global Reparation Fund, though they did not clarify how it would operate.

Positions on reparations are mixed in countries that would contribute.

For example, residents of the United States view the prospect of reparations mostly negatively. A Pew Research Center survey conducted in 2021 found that only about three in 10 U.S. adults said descendants of people enslaved in the U.S. should be repaid in some way, such as being given land or money.

Some activists say reparations should include direct financial payments, but also developmental aid for countries and the return of colonized resources.

——

McMakin contributed from Dakar, Senegal.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Global Framework for Reparatory Justice Adopted at Landmark Ghana Conference

Call for formal apologies from countries that benefited from transatlantic trade slave 

Fri 19 Jun 2026 13.26 EDT

A global framework for reparatory justice has been adopted at a conference in Ghana, as African and Caribbean leaders demanded formal apologies from countries that benefited from the transatlantic slave trade.

Heads of state and government and other officials formally approved the strategy on Friday at a gathering in a hotel in the capital, Accra, which was the first major meeting since the adoption of the landmark United Nations (UN) resolution declaring the trafficking of enslaved Africans as the gravest crime against humanity.

The document lays out a 19-point global framework for reparatory justice. They include a call for “all state and non-state institutions yet to do so” to “offer full, formal and unconditional apologies as a foundational step towards reconciliation, trust-building and reparatory justice”.

It also includes resolving to ensure fair and adequate compensation for Africans and people of African descent affected by legacies of enslavement, colonialism, genocide and apartheid, and to expedite the return of cultural property, human remains, archives and heritage to their countries of origin.

The framework calls for multilateral measures to address sovereign debt burdens, including debt relief, to tackle lasting socioeconomic impacts of enslavement, colonialism and related historical injustices.

Barbados prime minister announces manifesto for slavery reparations

“We recognise and honour the extensive efforts undertaken over generations by several governments, intergovernmental organisations, our forebearers, individuals and civil society partners across Africa, the Caribbean, the Americas, as well as in Europe and Asia in shaping the global reparations agenda,” the participants say in the document.

“We adopt this document as a basis for global collaboration and commit to engaging in transparent, constructive and good faith dialogue in advancing reparations and reparatory justice among all state and non-state actors.”

Ruth Ogbewekon, the project lead on reparatory Justice at the Pan African Lawyers Union who supported the preparation of the document, said the process tried to be inclusive given the pressures to build on the momentum of the resolution towards a global movement for reparatory justice.

She added that representatives from Africa and the African diaspora, as well as non-African allies, were consulted over several weeks. “Ultimately, it was a process where people wanted to be heard and to see that they were heard, and the events in Accra provided that,” she said.

The adoption came on the last day of a three-day conference billed Next Steps that also resulted in the establishment of three global panels on reparatory justice and restitution.

On Thursday, Ghana’s president, John Mahama, announced the creation of an advisory panel on reparatory justice, an expert panel on the restitution of cultural artefacts, and a legal panel on reparatory justice “to serve as the pillars of the next phase of this international effort”.

“These panels are not intended to replace the work of governments, regional organisations, or international institutions,” Mahama told hundreds of participants. “Rather, they are intended to strengthen that work by providing intellectual, technical and policy support as the international community advances from recognition to implementation.”

The advisory panel on reparatory justice comprises leaders of countries with historic ties to the transatlantic slave trade in Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean. They include Mahama, prime minister Mia Mottley of Barbados and presidents Joseph Boakai Sr, Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah and Bassirou Diomaye Faye of Liberia, Namibia and Senegal.

The three-day event started on Wednesday and attracted heads of state and government, ministers, civil society representatives, historians, researchers and legal experts from more than 80 countries.

Speaking virtually from the Élysée palace, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, said enslaved people “were torn from their homelands, deported, dehumanised, and treated as goods”. He said reparations should not be seen “as an end point, or a cheque written to bring the ​story to a close”.

The conference came nearly three months after the UN general assembly voted to adopt a proposal by Ghana on behalf of AU member states to recognise the trafficking of enslaved Africans and the racialised chattel enslavement of people from the continent as the gravest crime against humanity.

The resolution, a turning point for Africa’s quest for reparatory justice, calls for UN member states to have “inclusive, good-faith dialogue” on reparatory justice and “prompt and unhindered” restitution of properties that are of value to their countries of origin.

In his keynote address, Mahama, who is also the African Union champion on reparations, said the adoption of the resolution was intended to provide the foundation for “more meaningful” engagement, reflection, and action on reparatory justice.

He urged a global partnership by a broader community of nations and institutions in the pursuit of reparatory justice, noting that Caribbean Community’s (Caricom’s) 10-point reparation plan would serve as “an important starting point for the work of the new panels.

Starting with the Guardian’s own history, Guardian journalists explore the legacies of enslavement and reparative justice around the world

“We’re here because recognition creates responsibility, and because the enduring consequences of this history continue to demand thoughtful, coordinated and sustained international engagement,” he said.

“The crime we seek to address was transcontinental in its reach. Its consequences remain transcontinental in its impact, and the search for justice must therefore be transcontinental in its ambition.”

Mottley announced a revision of Caricom’s 10-point reparation plan to factor in the disproportionate impact of slavery on girls and women. She also encouraged a coordinated global effort to pursue reparatory justice.

“Let us not embark on separate journeys, but let us today reflect the unity of purpose, the recognition that whether it is through advocacy or advisory opinions or actions, our role is to ensure that there is no retreat from our requests and that we recognise that repair comes after recognition,” she said. “For in all that we do in the rest of our lives, where damage is perpetrated, repair is always, always required.

Boakai Sr said the UN resolution “opened a door” and collective resolve would determine whether it would lead to “meaningful justice, reconciliation and healing”.

“Let us not be remembered as another conference or another resolution that stirs consciences briefly before fading into history,” he said.

Dr Julius Garvey, son of the Black nationalist Marcus Garvey, lays a wreath to honour victims of the transatlantic slave trade during the Juneteenth celebrations at Osu Castle.

“Let us … leave Accra united in purpose and committed to ensuring that the greatest crime against humanity is met with one of humanity’s greatest responses: a determined global effort to restore dignity, repair historical wrongs and build a future founded on equality, shared prosperity, and our common humanity.”

Thursday’s events were preceded on Wednesday by consultations led by technical experts to formulate the framework.

Later on Friday, at Osu Castle, a 17th-century fortress in the capital built by the Danish that served as a hub for the transatlantic slave trade, attendees celebrated Juneteenth, which marks the end of slavery in the US. The event included wreath-laying to honour victims of the transatlantic slave trade.

African Leaders Mark Juneteenth with Call for Reparations for Atlantic Slave Trade

President John Dramani Mahama, left, and Barbados Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, right, attend a Juneteenth commemoration ceremony in Accra, Ghana, Friday, June 19, 2026.

Ghana

African and Caribbean leaders in Ghana on Friday urged former slave-trading nations to issue apologies and reparations over the trafficking of enslaved Africans after a landmark United Nations resolution in March declaring it “the gravest crime against humanity.”

The 'Next Steps' conference in the Ghanaian capital of Accra issued a declaration calling on countries involved in the Atlantic slave trade to “offer full, formal and unconditional apologies as a foundational step towards reconciliation, trust-building and reparatory justice.”

The UN resolution is non-binding but carries moral authority. Organisers said the Ghana conference was aimed at moving the reparations debate from recognition to concrete measures, including moves to require compensation under international law.

About 12 million Africans were forcefully taken by traders from European nations from the 16th to the 19th century and enslaved on plantations that built wealth at the price of misery.

Ghana's President John Dramani Mahama said the UN resolution had created a new opportunity for meaningful engagement on reparations. He said the effects of slavery continue to be felt across Africa, the Caribbean, and the wider African diaspora.

“Our voices were fragmented for decades and it served the interest of some groups to keep those voices fragmented,” Mahama told delegates from more than 80 countries.

At a reparations summit in Ghana in 2023, participants proposed establishing a Global Reparation Fund, though they did not clarify how it would operate.

Positions on reparations are mixed in countries that would contribute.

For example, residents of the United States view the prospect of reparations mostly negatively. A Pew Research Center survey conducted in 2021 found that only about three in 10 US adults said descendants of people enslaved in the US should be repaid in some way, such as being given land or money.

Some activists say reparations should include direct financial payments, but also developmental aid for countries and the return of colonised resources.

Top Iranian Officials Warn of Breaching MoU, Vow Harsh Response

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Al Mayadeen

19 Jun 2026 23:51

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

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

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

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

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

'Israel' main enemy of peace in MidEast: Tabatabaei

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

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

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

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

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

Rezaei cited several reasons for the enemy’s stalemate:

Internal political turmoil within the United States;

Exhaustion and a lack of readiness among US military personnel;

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

Obstruction faced by the US administration within Congress;

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

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

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

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

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

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

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Al Mayadeen

19 Jun 2026 20:18

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Closing crossings, preventing the arrival of weapons, technologies

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

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

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

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

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

Inherent 'right to defend, liberate the land'

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

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

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

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

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

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Agencies

19 Jun 2026 21:29

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

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

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

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

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

What is Ebola?

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

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

Ongoing outbreak in Congo

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

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

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

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