Thursday, April 30, 2026

Malian Forces Retake Border Town After ISIS-linked Attack Near Niger

By Al Mayadeen English

30 Apr 2026 23:55

Malian forces regained control of a town near Niger after ISIS-linked militants withdrew following clashes, as the army intensifies patrols after coordinated weekend attacks.

Residents said Malian forces have regained control of a border town near Niger after militants linked to ISIS entered it earlier this week, as the army moves to reassert authority following coordinated attacks over the weekend.

Malian junta chief Assimi Goïta appeared publicly for the first time on Tuesday since rebels and an alliance of separatist groups launched their Saturday assault, which resulted in the killing of the defense minister.

Two residents of the town of Ménaka, near the Niger border, told Reuters that fighters from ISIS in the Sahel had withdrawn following clashes with the army, which has resumed ground and air patrols. A senior diplomatic source also confirmed that the military had retaken control of the area.

Malian forces intensify patrols

In the central Mopti region, which was also hit in the weekend attacks, calm returned as of Wednesday, although residents remained on high alert, according to a local resident. He said the army appeared to have increased checkpoints and stepped up both ground and air patrols around the city.

A resident of Gao, the largest city in northern Mali, reported increased military patrols as civilians prepared for possible further attacks. In the central town of Sevaré, tensions also remained high on Wednesday, with a witness saying gunfire was heard throughout the night.

Goïta, after disappearing from public view for several days, pledged to neutralize those responsible for the Saturday attacks, which saw open coordination between militants and the Azawad Liberation Front, who seized the strategic town of Kidal from Russian-backed Malian forces. He also met the Russian ambassador on Tuesday and visited a hospital where the wounded were being treated.

Mali militant attacks hit Bamako, northern cities

Armed militants launched coordinated attacks early Saturday on the capital Bamako and several locations in the country’s interior, in what appears to be a multi-front assault involving different groups, the Malian army has reported.

A Reuters eyewitness said two powerful explosions were heard, followed by sustained gunfire shortly before 6:00 AM GMT near the main Kati military base outside Bamako. Soldiers were deployed to block roads in the area as security forces responded to the incident.

Similar disturbances were also reported around the same time in the central city of Sévaré and in the northern cities of Kidal and Gao. “There is gunfire everywhere,” one witness in Sévaré told Reuters, describing widespread unrest.

Mohamed Lamine Ould Ramadan, a spokesperson for the rebel alliance known as the Azawad Liberation Front, claimed on social media that his forces had taken control of multiple positions in Kidal and Gao.

Reuters was not able to independently verify the claim. Four security sources also said the al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM) was involved in Saturday’s attacks, although the group did not immediately claim responsibility.

Sudan’s War Leaves Khartoum with Unexploded Mines and Other Weapons

As residents return to Sudan’s capital Khartoum after months of fighting, unexploded ordnance and landmines left behind by the war are creating a growing danger across the capital. Associated Press reporter Sam Mednick, reporting from the city, says deminers are working to clear contaminated areas, but aid groups warn the process will take years amid limited funding and international attention.

By SAM MEDNICK

2:07 AM EDT, April 29, 2026

KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) — Khaled Abdulgader noticed children using an unusual object as a football and tried to stop them. He grabbed it, and it exploded in his hand. He lost two fingers, and shrapnel sliced into his chest.

In a hospital for a checkup after last year’s blast, he tried to stay positive.

“I feel like, ‘Thank God it was just my hands,’” Abdulgader said.

He is among hundreds of people who have been injured or killed by unexploded ordnance in Sudan’s three years of war. That includes mines as well as weapons such as bombs, shells, grenades or rockets that failed to detonate, tens of thousands of items in all.

The government and aid groups say it’s a problem particularly in and around Khartoum, where residents, many unfamiliar with the threat, have started to return after the Sudanese military recaptured the capital last year.

Many of the dead or injured are children

Nearly 60 people were injured or killed in Khartoum state last year, over half of them children, and 23 were injured or killed in the first three months of this year, 21 of them children, according to the United Nations.

Decades of conflict in Sudan have left unexploded ordnance scattered across the country, with a combined area of about 7,700 football fields contaminated.

More than half of that is the result of the war that erupted in 2023 between Sudan’s army and the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group, with new areas such as Khartoum state affected.

Both the Sudanese army and the RSF have been accused of laying mines, according to aid groups, during the war as they fought for control of the capital.

“The presence of land mines and other explosive ordnance is of great concern to everybody,” said Juma Abuanja, the team leader for Jasmar, a Sudanese demining group.

He said it will take years to clear. Demining is a slow, careful process with staff covering 10 to 15 square meters a day.

Khartoum city is still a ghost town, strewn with remnants of fighting. Charred, abandoned buildings are pocked with bullet holes.

Walking through the streets, AP journalists saw a soldier emerge from a house with a small metal object that appeared to be a tail of a rocket-propelled grenade after being summoned by a resident to assess the threat.

A member of the military media accompanied the AP during the visit, including during interviews. The AP retains full editorial control of its content.

Tens of thousands of people have returned to the city and 1.7 million have returned to Khartoum state, according to the U.N.

The U.N. says deminers over nearly the past year have cleared some 7.8 million square meters of land in Khartoum state. They found more than 36,000 items including hundreds of anti-tank and anti-personnel mines.

Those that are safe to move are destroyed away from population areas. Those that can’t be moved are destroyed on the spot.

There is still much to clear as people try to rebuild their lives.

In Khartoum, Jasmar’s demining team has spent eight months clearing a popular park from land mines, one of at least seven identified mine fields in Khartoum state. Some locations are on the outskirts. Others are downtown. Some are near important bridges.

Removing their heavy vests and face shields, team members rested last week under trees between shifts, shielded from the scorching sun.

The clearance of some 123,000 square meters in the park began in August and is expected to be completed in May. So far the group has found more than 160 devices, including anti-personnel and anti-tank mines.

Abuanja said at least one person was killed in the park before they started clearing it. The area is now cordoned off, surrounded by danger signs.

Some people hesitate to tell authorities

Sudan’s government says it is doing what it can to reduce the threat but says it is strapped for cash and personnel.

A government official told the AP it is trying to raise awareness by speaking at mosques and in the markets and via radio and podcasts, and it is creating educational materials with schools. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Yet several injured people told the AP they hadn’t seen or heard any warnings, which began in late 2024.

Some people said there could be fear of reporting unexploded ordnance to authorities because they could be questioned about why they have weapons. A report earlier this year by Human Rights Watch said security forces have detained civilians for allegedly collaborating with the RSF, especially in areas where the army has regained control.

Others don’t recognize the threat until it’s too late.

Mogadem Ibrahim once picked up a piece of metal thinking it was part of a car. But when it stuck to his hand and he tried to strike it away, it exploded.

The 18-year-old now keeps his bandaged left arm hidden beneath his clothes. The blast outside his home in Omdurman in August took his fingers, and he can no longer work as a laborer.

“I feel depressed and worthless. I was supporting my family and now I’m sitting here and doing nothing,” he said.

Boat With Sudanese Migrants Capsizes off Libya, Leaving at Least 17 Dead, UN Says

This is a locator map for Libya with its capital, Tripoli. (AP Photo)

By FATMA KHALED

3:02 PM EDT, April 30, 2026

CAIRO (AP) — A boat carrying 33 Sudanese migrants capsized in the Mediterranean Sea near the eastern Libyan town of Tobruk, leaving at least 17 people dead and nine others missing, U.N. officials said Thursday.

Only seven of the people on board survived the shipwreck, the U.N. refugee agency said on X.

It was unclear when the boat capsized.

The U.N. International Organization for Migration, or IOM, said that when the survivors were rescued, they had been stranded at sea for several days, and that some of the migrants had died of hunger and thirst.

The boat had taken off from Tobruk and was heading to Greece when it capsized about 100 kilometers (60 miles) northwest of the city, the IOM said. The agency said rescue operations were carried out by the navy, the Libyan coast guard and the Libyan Red Crescent.

The Libyan Red Crescent posted photos Thursday of the rescue showing crew members moving several bodies in black bags.

The medical conditions of the survivors were not immediately known.

Libya has been a main transit point for migrants fleeing war and poverty in Africa and the Middle East. The country plunged into chaos after a 2011 counter-revolution led by the Pentagon-CIA-NATO operatives which toppled and killed longtime Revolutionary Pan-African statesman Moammar Gadhafi.

Earlier this month, more than 80 migrants went missing after a boat that departed a Libyan coastal town capsized in the central Mediterranean.

The IOM said in early April that 2026 had seen the deadliest start to a year for migrants crossing the Mediterranean Sea since 2014. In the Central Mediterranean alone, 765 people had been reported dead, marking about a 150% increase compared with the same period last year.

IOM Director General Amy Pope told The Associated Press earlier this month that the agency is seeing a growing number of migrants from Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Sudan on boats in the Mediterranean.

Rebels Use Ukrainian Drone Tactics to Fight Russians in Mali

The Azawad Liberation Front has driven the Kremlin’s forces from key territories in the Sahel

A recent video showed a drone assault on a Russian camp in Kidal

Jack Denton, Nairobi

Thursday April 30 2026, 5.45pm BST

Rebel fighters targeting Russian mercenaries in northern Mali have exhibited sophisticated use of drones of the type used widely and effectively by Ukraine in its defence against the Kremlin’s invasion.

The Azawad Liberation Front (FLA) forced Russians from the city of Kidal on Sunday in a withdrawal that experts said was threatening Moscow’s ambitions in Africa. Tuareg rebels have since seized towns and villages in three regions of northern Mali that make up more than 50 per cent of the country’s territory.

The Kremlin said on Thursday that Russian forces would stay in Mali. Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said: “Russia will continue, including in Mali, to combat extremism, terrorism and other harmful phenomena and will continue to provide assistance to the current government.”

Ukraine has previously aided the Tuareg separatists who often find Russian mercenaries in their crosshairs as they battle the Moscow-backed military government in Mali, fighting for their own state in the country’s north.

In their latest assault Tuareg fighters have used drones resistant to electronic jamming because of their connection to pilots via fibre-optic cables. This is key evidence of Kyiv’s lasting influence, even if Ukraine has not been directly involved in the conflict.

There is no evidence that Ukraine has aided the FLA’s allies Jamat Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM), Al-Qaeda’s franchise in west Africa, in their recent attacks. JNIM has assaulted strongholds in central and southern Mali, killing the minister of defence and intelligence chief and bringing violence to the capital, Bamako, now under siege. The governments of Russia and Mali have accused Kyiv of a role in the recent violence. Ukraine has not commented. 

A recent video shared by the FLA’s media arm showed a drone assault on a Russian camp in Kidal consistent with fibre-optic suicide drones. Images of FLA fighters with such drones also circulated online last year.  

Ukraine began training Tuareg drone pilots as early as 2022, the year of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine and a year after Russian mercenaries entered Mali, according to Nina Wilén, director of the Africa programme at Egmont Royal Institute for International Relations in Brussels. 

The FLA was specifically trained to use fibre-optic drones, which Ukraine first started using on battlefield in 2024, research from the Egmont Institute published this month showed.

Ukraine said that it supported Tuareg rebels in a July 2024 attack in Tinzawatène, in the Kidal region, which killed 84 Russian mercenaries and 47 Malian soldiers. 

Andriy Yusov, spokesman for Ukrainian military intelligence, told Ukraine’s public broadcaster: “The rebels received all the necessary information they needed and not just [information] … You will see more of this in the future.”

Mali severed diplomatic ties with Ukraine over the matter in August 2024. 

Last September Abdoulaye Maiga, the Malian prime minister, told the UN general assembly: “A year later the situation has worsened and the Ukrainian regime has become one of the main suppliers of kamikaze drones to terrorist groups. As far removed as they may seem, the war in Ukraine and terrorism in the Sahel are connected.”

Russian forces beaten back by al-Qaeda militants in Mali

Ukraine has denied that it provided material support, such as drones, which are commercially available models, to Tuareg rebels.

“It’s very hard to say exactly the link [with FLA today], and the Ukrainians have been clear about toning this down after Tinzawatène because they realised it could backfire,” said Wilén. “For the Ukrainians, before Tinzawatène, the motive had always been to fight Russians abroad wherever they can.”

In 2025 Mohamed Ramadane, a spokesman for the FLA, said that fighters from his group had travelled to Ukraine to receive specialist training in the use of drone warfare.

Mohamed Elmaouloud Ramadane, spokesman for the Tuareg separatists of the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), poses during a photo session.

Mohamed Ramadane

“Back on the ground they significantly strengthened their operational skills and in turn trained other fighters in this strategic area. Today this technological mastery is fully integrated into our combat capabilities,” Ramadane said. “Perhaps what binds us most to Ukraine is that like us it is suffering Russian barbarism and imperialism.”

Russia’s defence ministry said this week that 12,000 militants were involved in what it called an attempted coup in Mali, and that fighters were trained by Ukrainian and European instructors.

In a national address on Tuesday Assimi Goita, the Malian president, said that there was “a broader destabilisation campaign devised and carried out by armed terrorist groups and their internal and external sponsors who provide them with intelligence and logistical support”, a likely reference to France, Mali’s former colonial ruler whose military was expelled from the country after a series of coups this decade.

Wilén cautioned against over-emphasising the link between Ukraine and the FLA. “It’s playing into the speech by the military junta in Mali, which is saying there are external forces propping up JNIM and FLA,” she said.

Burkina Faso Ups Security After Mali Attacks

Soldiers loyal to Burkina Faso leader Ibrahim Traore are pictured in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, October 14, 2022

By Africa News

The ruling junta in Burkina Faso has tightened security in the capital Ouagadougou in the wake of coordinated attacks in its neighbour and ally Mali, security sources told AFP on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, Burkina Faso's security ministry announced the launch of an operation aimed at strengthening security across the country and called for vigilance.

It also called on people to report any suspicious behaviour, particularly around sensitive infrastructure such as military barracks, airports, administrative buildings and other installations of national importance.

"A major security operation has been deployed in Ouagadougou and in other parts of the country," a police source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

A second police source said units have been sent to strategic intersections in the capital.

"The units will also be gathering operational intelligence related to crime and terrorism," the source added.

The measures came after unprecedented jihadist and Tuareg rebel attacks in Mali, which like Burkina Faso and their Sahel ally Niger is also run by the military.

The three countries have faced repeated attacks from al-Qaeda- and Islamic State-linked extremists for the last decade.

A Burkinabe military source said the army was on a "state of alert because we are at war."

"Vigilance and watchfulness are still the order of the day, so this [the security operation] is not exceptional even if the situation in Mali calls for greater rigour and vigilance," the source added.

Niger's junta on Wednesday cancelled its traditional 1 May parades across the country for security reasons.

The government of Ivory Coast, which neighbours Mali and Burkina Faso to the south, meanwhile said that its borders were secure but that it was expected an "influx of refugees" as a result of the Mali attacks.

Our Borders Longer Than Two Walls Across America: Speaker Qalibaf Mocks US Blockade

Thursday, 30 April 2026 9:47 PM

Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf looks on after a press conference with Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, in Beirut, Lebanon, October 12, 2024.

Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf has ridiculed the US naval blockade against Iran, pointing out that the country’s vast borders make any attempt at sealing it off impossible.

In a post on X, Qalibaf proposed a hypothetical scenario in which two walls are built across the United States, one from New York City to the West Coast and another from Los Angeles to the East Coast.

“If you build two walls, one from NYC to the West Coast and another from LA to the East Coast, the total length will be 7,755 km, which is still about 1,000 km short of Iran’s total borders,” he wrote.

“Good luck blockading a country with those borders.”

The speaker added a note for US War Secretary Pete Hegseth, who advocated for the blockade before US members of Congress on Thursday: “P.S. For Pete Hegseth: 1 km = 0.62 mi.”

The United States has imposed a naval blockade on Iranian ports following the outbreak of the US-Israeli war of aggression on Iran on February 28.

Tehran has repeatedly condemned the blockade as illegal and a violation of the fragile ceasefire brokered by Pakistan.

Iran’s total land and sea borders stretch over 8,700 kilometers, including coastlines along the Persian Gulf, the Gulf of Oman and the Caspian Sea.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian warned on Thursday that the blockade plan is an extension of the war and its continuation will not be tolerated.

On Persian Gulf Day, Iranian President Says Naval Blockade Poses Threat to Global Peace

Thursday, 30 April 2026 9:32 AM

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian says any attempt to impose naval restrictions and blockade contravenes international regulations and poses a threat to the interests of regional nations and global peace and stability and is doomed to fail.

In a message on the occasion of the National Day of the Persian Gulf on Thursday, Pezeshkian said the day is a valuable opportunity to once again remind the historical truth that this waterway is an “inseparable” part of Iranians’ identity and a symbol of the great Iranian nation's resistance to old and new colonialists.

He added that the day is celebrated this year under the circumstances that the US-Israeli imposed war against the Islamic Republic once again reveals the significance of this region, particularly the Strait of Hormuz, to the world.

He emphasized that the bravery of the Iranian naval forces showed that this vital passage plays a key role in transferring energy and is also a symbol of national sovereignty and “reflects Iran's undeniable role in ensuring regional and global security.”

The president noted that the enemies have changed the field of their pressure from economic sector to naval blockade and restrictions in marine trade routes as a new means to exert pressure on the Iranian nation and government.

“But our enemies should know that the Persian Gulf is not an arena for imposing unilateral foreign wills, but rather is a part of the system of international interactions and its security only makes sense in light of collective cooperation and mutual respect for the sovereignty of its coastal countries,” Pezeshkian added.

“As we have repeatedly announced, the presence and interference of foreigners will not help improve security in the region but will create tension and disrupt lasting peace in the Persian Gulf,” he emphasized.

During the 40 days of the US-Israeli aggression, it became clear that the US military bases in regional countries failed to ensure security for the host countries and jeopardized their peace and security, he said.

Pezeshkian stated that these bases from which attacks against Iran were carried out were considered legitimate targets for the country as they facilitated the invasion against the Islamic Republic.

As the guardian of security of the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, Iran continues to adhere to the principles of freedom of navigation and maritime safety, except for hostile countries, he emphasized.

He, however, reiterated that Iran believes that the implementation of such principles must be coupled with respect for the Iranian nation and sovereignty.

Pezeshkian held the United States and the Israeli regime responsible for any insecurity in this waterway.

Persian Gulf Day, marked on April 30, commemorates the 1622 defeat of Portugal, highlighting Iran’s unchallenged sovereignty and strategic control over Strait of Hormuz, and enduring lessons on diplomacy and resistance.

He expressed hope that lasting security and stability would be restored to the Persian Gulf without the presence of foreign powers.

On April 8, forty days into the war, a Pakistan-brokered temporary ceasefire took effect. High-ranking Iranian and American negotiators then held talks in Islamabad but stopped short of an agreement amid Washington’s excessive demands and insistence on unreasonable positions.

Since then, Iran has categorically refused to rejoin the process unless the US lifts the illegal blockade it has imposed on Iranian vessels and ports.

Tehran has also asserted that, as long as the blockade is still in place, it has no intention of reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

The US blockade of Iranian ports has also failed to achieve its stated aim of cutting off Iran’s oil revenues.

CBS London Bureau Chief Fired After Clashes with Zionist Editor Over Iran, Gaza Coverage: Report

Tuesday, 28 April 2026 6:55 AM

Claire Day, CBS News' former London bureau chief

CBS News has removed London bureau chief Claire Day following clashes with pro-Israel editor-in-chief Bari Weiss over the network’s coverage of Iran and Gaza, a report says.

A CBS source said Shayndi Raice, a newly hired foreign editor from The Wall Street Journal, would instead lead all international coverage for CBS News and would be based in London starting May 11, New York Post reported on Monday.

In a memo to staff, CBS News president Tom Cibrowski wrote, "Our London Bureau will be moving to a new editorial leadership structure, with the introduction of a foreign editor role overseeing all international coverage."

Tensions over coverage

Sources said friction in the London bureau arose over coverage of the West Asia region.

One freelance cameraman and editor reportedly verbally attacked Day, accusing her of imbalanced coverage.

Also on Monday, Day addressed staff about her departure, asking the unnamed cameraman, who had claimed to have a "direct line" to Weiss, to leave the room before giving an "emotional" farewell, a source said.

An internal investigation into potential bias, however, cleared Day of any allegations, according to sources.

Clashes with Weiss

Day, who led the London bureau for two years and had been with CBS News for two decades, reportedly clashed with Weiss, a self-admitted Zionist, over coverage of Iran and Gaza.

A source said, "Bari barely spoke to her" to address concerns.

Another insider explained that Day never had a blow-up on editorial calls, but made clear she wanted coverage to be balanced. "It’s really sad. Claire has been the most committed soldier to CBS News for nearly a quarter of a century," the source said, calling her dismissal "appalling."

Her replacement, Raice, had been based in the occupied territories during her time with The Wall Street Journal. She would cover "security issues" in the West Asia region following the historic resistance operation against the Israeli regime in October 2023, which was followed by a genocidal Israeli war against the Gaza Strip.

House Passes Stalled Homeland Security Funding Bill, Ending Shutdown

Republicans were forced to use a special maneuver to steer around opposition in their own party and speed the measure to the floor, relying on Democratic cooperation to push it through.

The legislation pays for Department of Homeland Security operations through Sept. 30, except for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and parts of border patrol, which received an earlier influx of money from a Republican-only bill.

By Carl Hulse and Michael Gold

Reporting from the Capitol

April 30, 2026

The House on Thursday passed stalled legislation reopening the Department of Homeland Security, ending a record 76-day shutdown at the agency and resolving uncertainty over whether thousands of federal security workers would be paid in May.

The voice vote after a brief debate brought to a close a bitter partisan fight spurred by President Trump’s immigration crackdown and the tactics of federal immigration officers who fatally shot two U.S. citizens during immigration roundups in Minneapolis earlier this year. Negotiations between the White House and Democrats who were demanding new restrictions on the officers went nowhere, leading to an impasse that cut off funding on Feb. 14.

But it was a dispute among Republicans that has kept the department shuttered for nearly a month, and the G.O.P. had to bypass its own right flank to push through the bill.

Senate Republicans and Democrats had struck a deal on April 1 to fund everything except for the immigration enforcement agencies, vowing to approve that money separately in a bill that Democrats could not block. But the House G.O.P. declined for weeks to act on the measure, with conservatives refusing to vote for a bill that did not fund ICE and border patrol.

House leaders finally took it up on Thursday ahead of a 12-day break, and after the White House requested that the bill be passed immediately.

“It has come to this,” said Representative Mark Alford, Republican of Missouri, as he offered the legislation on the House floor. “We need, no we must, pay our D.H.S. workers.”

The legislation funds the department through Sept. 30, except for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and parts of border patrol, which received an earlier influx of money from a Republican-only law. Republicans in the House and Senate are now pushing new legislation that would pour an additional $70 billion into immigration operations through the end of Mr. Trump’s second term, using a process that would shield the measure from a Democratic filibuster.

Speaker Mike Johnson had sat on the funding legislation despite encouragement from the White House to pass it, as members of the House lashed out at their colleagues in the Senate for putting them in a bad political situation. To prevent employees from having to work without pay, the White House had shifted existing funds around to meet payroll after disruptions in security screening caused chaos at some airports. But the administration warned this week that it was running short of money to continue doing so.

With some Republicans still objecting to allowing the measure to come up, Mr. Johnson was forced to resort to a maneuver that sped it to the floor, limiting debate and requiring a two-thirds supermajority for passage.

In the end, opponents did not even insist on a recorded vote, though some, including Representative Chip Roy, Republican of Texas, could be heard shouting “No” as it passed.

Democrats said the impasse could have been resolved weeks ago.

“It has been Republicans who have been intransigent,” said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut, the senior Democrat on the Appropriations Committee. “It could have been done 76 days ago. But I will take it today.”

Republicans said House approval on Wednesday night of a budget outline that would pave the way for the $70 billion immigration enforcement bill finally cleared the way for approval of the funding plan, which passed the Senate on a bipartisan basis weeks ago.

Mr. Johnson said that approving the budget resolution was “critically important” to releasing the funding for the rest of the department, providing some assurance to House Republicans that sufficient money would be forthcoming even if Democrats continued their blockade. The House and Senate are to consider legislation providing the money when they return in mid-May and try to meet the president’s June 1 deadline for getting the legislation to his desk.

“Now that that box is checked, we’re allowed, then, to proceed and go through with the rest of it,” Mr. Johnson said.

The speaker acknowledged on Thursday that he had “trashed” the spending bill when the Senate first sent it to the House in March. He again called it “haphazardly drafted” and criticized it for zeroing out immigration enforcement operations.

“We threw a fit, and we had to,” he said.

But he did not explain why he backed down from a vow earlier this week to bring a modified bill to the floor.

Despite weeks of negotiations, the White House and Senate Democrats could never reach agreement on new limits on the tactics and conduct of immigration officers, including Democrats’ demands for a ban on agents wearing masks and a warrant requirement for some arrests.

Members of both parties have said the clash is further diminishing Congress’s power of the purse, as Republicans resort to the budget maneuver to fund significant parts of the department outside normal channels.

“It is really a bad way to do business, whether you are a Republican or Democrat,” Representative Tom Cole, the Oklahoma Republican who leads the Appropriations Committee, said. “It’s bad for Congress to give any president, even one you support, three years of funding this way."

The Vaccine Skeptic in Trump’s New C.D.C. Leadership Team

Dr. Sara Brenner is a physician, an F.D.A. official and a “MAHA mom” who has said people should not reflexively believe in the benefits of vaccines.

Dr. Sara Brenner fully embraced the Make America Healthy Again movement after being named the acting commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, signing her first emails to the agency’s staff with the slogan.

By Apoorva Mandavilli

April 30, 2026, 10:29 a.m. ET

When President Trump named a new leadership team at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention two weeks ago, public attention focused on Dr. Erica Schwartz, his nominee to be the agency’s director. Her public support of vaccines was interpreted by some as a sign that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s quest to limit childhood immunizations might be coming to an end.

But another senior official Mr. Trump named to the team shares many of Mr. Kennedy’s views, suggesting the potential for continuing tension at the public health agency.

Mr. Trump appointed Dr. Sara Brenner, a deputy commissioner at the Food and Drug Administration and a self-described “MAHA mom,” to be Mr. Kennedy’s senior counselor for public health, a post that, unlike the C.D.C. director, does not require Senate confirmation. A look at Dr. Brenner’s background suggests she is aligned with Mr. Kennedy on some of his signature issues, including skepticism about vaccines and a strong belief in the importance of fitness.

The public health counselor serves as the liaison between the health secretary and the C.D.C. (and on occasion the White House). As such, Dr. Brenner, who starts the job in the next couple of weeks, will be Mr. Kennedy’s eyes and ears at an agency he has been warring with through most of his tenure as the nation’s top health official.

She will be based in Washington in the office of the secretary, and will most likely meet with the top officials at the C.D.C. at least once every day. She will also be Mr. Kennedy’s liaison to the National Institutes of Health, an agency that has come under fire for making large cuts to medical research grants.

Dr. Nirav Shah, who was the C.D.C.’s principal deputy director from March 2023 through February 2025, said Dr. Brenner could wield a powerful influence on the nation’s public health policies through her role. (Dr. Shah, a Democrat, is currently running for governor in Maine.)

He cited the work of previous officials who held that role and acted as “a conduit and a sounding board for agencies to help them get where they wanted to go.”

“If Sara follows that lead,” he added, “then there’s a possibility that it will be constructive. But if she rather asserts herself as a stand-in for the secretary or the director, then what we will see is more political interference.”

The Department of Health and Human Services would not make Dr. Brenner available for an interview.

“Dr. Brenner was selected for this role because of her experience as a physician and her work on federal public health policy,” Andrew Nixon, a spokesman for the department, said in an emailed statement.

“She brings a strong understanding of both clinical care and research and will work with Secretary Kennedy to optimize coordination with the C.D.C. and N.I.H.,” he added.

At a Make America Healthy Again event last May, Dr. Brenner said she had been pregnant during the pandemic and chose not to receive the Covid vaccine because she was concerned about the vaccine’s “biodistribution patterns.”

She co-wrote a memo saying there was “no clear evidence” that the benefits of Covid vaccines for children under 18 outweighed the risk of harm. She also intervened in the F.D.A.’s review of Novavax’s Covid vaccine, asking for more data on the shot at the 11th hour — a highly unusual step for the agency’s deputy commissioner.

Sarah Despres, who served as the public health counselor during the Biden administration, would not comment on Dr. Brenner specifically. But she said a person in that role would receive enough notice of new initiatives and scientific reports, including in the agency’s flagship journal, for her or the secretary’s office to block them.

“If you’re interested in interfering, you will have a heads-up,” Ms. Despres said.

Dr. Brenner, who holds degrees in medicine and public health, is currently a principal deputy commissioner at the F.D.A. In interviews, four former senior officials who worked closely with her described her as ambitious and eager to please her bosses, even if that meant going against the interests of the F.D.A.’s rank-and-file employees. (They asked to remain anonymous because of fear of retaliation from the administration.)

Two former colleagues recalled Dr. Brenner saying that people should not reflexively believe in vaccines but should insist on facts as they do for other medical products — echoing comments made by Mr. Kennedy and others who question vaccines. Dr. Brenner seemed unaware of the large body of evidence on vaccine safety that already exists, the colleagues said.

Asked about Dr. Brenner’s views on vaccines, Mr. Nixon said, “Anonymous characterizations don’t reflect her record.”

Aaron Siri, a lawyer who for years joined with Mr. Kennedy to bring lawsuits over vaccine safety, said he believed Dr. Brenner would “at least critically consider concerns” from people with opposing views.

“Wherever she comes out at the end, at least you feel like the data and evidence were given a more objective overall review,” he said.

Dr. Brenner joined the F.D.A. in 2019 as a midlevel scientist in the agency’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health. Shortly after Mr. Trump’s inauguration, in January 2025, she was catapulted to the position of acting commissioner, a job she held until April when his nominee for the job, Dr. Martin Makary, became the agency’s leader.

Before her ascent, some top officials were unfamiliar with her. Dr. Janet Woodcock, who worked at the agency for decades and was its principal deputy commissioner from 2022 to 2024, said she had “never even heard her name.”

Dr. Robert Califf, who led the F.D.A. during parts of the Obama and Biden administrations, said Dr. Brenner “was part of some briefings and seemed very professional,” but he did not know her well enough to comment on her work.

Dr. Brenner may have come to the attention of Mr. Trump’s team when she worked at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy during his first term. After being named acting commissioner, she fully embraced the MAHA movement, signing her introductory emails to the F.D.A. staff with the slogan.

She was the agency’s leader while widespread layoffs were decimating the ranks of staff scientists. In her communications with staff members, she amplified the messages of the administration and did not address the distress of the employees, the former colleagues said. At the same time, she made it clear that she did not want to be in the office five days a week and sometimes showed up to meetings in workout clothes, the colleagues said.

In a video posted by the F.D.A. to social media as a “spin on the Pete and Bobby challenge” — referring to fitness videos made by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Mr. Kennedy — she knocks out 50 burpees, 50 forearm to full planks and 100 bicycle situps in seven minutes and one second.

Sounding much like Mr. Kennedy, she says, “I’ve been encouraging people my whole career to understand that taking care of their body is one of the most important things that you can do on a daily basis.”

Mr. Nixon, the health department spokesman, said that “Dr. Brenner exemplifies what it means to be a MAHA mom through her commitment to improving children’s health and well-being through nutrition and fitness.”

The other three officials Mr. Trump named to lead the C.D.C. have all been enthusiastically received by public health experts.

Dr. Schwartz, the White House’s nominee to be the agency’s director, has degrees in medicine and public health and has praised vaccines, prompting cautious optimism that she will steady the C.D.C. It is unclear when she might be confirmed by Senate. The White House has not yet filed papers to move her nomination forward.

The agency has been without an official director since Mr. Kennedy fired Susan Monarez after a dispute over vaccine policy 29 days after she began the job. The agency has also experienced widespread layoffs, resignations and a shooting since Mr. Trump returned to the White House.

In hearings before Congress over the past few days, Mr. Kennedy has contradicted himself, telling one group of lawmakers that he would not commit to carrying out Dr. Schwartz’s policies on vaccines, but later recanting that stance in front of another.

But Dr. Schwartz is also a longstanding member of the armed forces, used to following orders in that context, some public health experts noted.

Mr. Trump named two others, Sean Slovenski, a seasoned health care executive, and Dr. Jennifer Shuford, a highly respected epidemiologist and physician, as deputies to Dr. Schwartz. But more quietly, the administration has also appointed Stephen Sayle, a former tobacco executive, as deputy director for legislative affairs. And several other political appointees with known antipathy to vaccines, including Stuart Burns, remain at the agency.

Mr. Kennedy and his appointees have already skirted the normal procedures to try to alter the childhood vaccine schedule, although a federal judge has blocked those efforts. And Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, the C.D.C.’s acting head, recently canceled publication of a report showing the effectiveness of Covid shots last winter.

It is unclear where Dr. Brenner stands on other issues and whether she would go along with Mr. Kennedy’s agenda without question.

“It’s important for people who work in the Office of the Secretary to have their own red lines, and to be willing to push back if a request from their boss comes that is inappropriate,” Ms. Despres said.

Apoorva Mandavilli reports on science and global health for The Times, with a focus on infectious diseases and pandemics and the public health agencies that try to manage them.

Louisiana Congressional Primaries Suspended as a Result of Supreme Court Ruling, State Officials Say

10:59 AM EDT, April 30, 2026

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Louisiana’s congressional primaries won’t be going forward as scheduled in May, as a result of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that struck down a majority Black congressional district, the state’s top elected officials said Thursday.

Gov. Jeff Landry and Attorney General Liz Murrill, both Republicans, said in a joint statement that Wednesday’s high court ruling effectively prohibits the state from carrying out the primaries under the current districts. Early voting had been scheduled to begin Saturday in advance of the May 16 primary.

“The State is currently enjoined from carrying out congressional elections under the current map,” Landry and Murrill said in the statement posted to social media. “We are working together with the Legislature and the Secretary of State’s office to develop a path forward.”

The election suspension was denounced by some Democrats.

“This is going to cause mass confusion among voters -- Democrats, Republicans, white, Black, everybody,” said Louisiana state Sen. Royce Duplessis, a Democrat who represents the New Orleans area. “What they’re effectively doing is changing the rules of the game in the middle of the game. It’s rigging the system.

Louisiana currently is represented in the U.S. House by four Republicans and two Democrats. A revised map could give Republicans a chance to pick up at least one more seat in the November midterm elections — adding to Republican gains elsewhere in an unusual national redistricting battle.

Voting districts typically are redrawn once a decade, after each census. But President Donald Trump last year urged Texas Republicans to redraw House districts to give the GOP an edge in the midterms. California Democrats reciprocated, and redistricting efforts soon cascaded across states.

On Wednesday, Florida became the latest state to redraw its U.S. House districts, adopting a new map backed by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis that could give the GOP a chance at winning several additional seats.

The Florida vote occurred just hours after the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservative majority issued a ruling that significantly weakened minority protections under the federal Voting Rights Act. The court said Louisiana officials had relied too heavily on race when drawing a congressional district that is represented by Democrat Cleo Fields.

After the 2020 census, Louisiana officials had drawn House voting district boundaries that maintained one Black majority district and five mostly white districts, in a state with a population that is about one-third Black.

A federal judge later struck down the map for violating the Voting Rights Act. And the following year the Supreme Court found that Alabama had to create its own second majority Black congressional district.

In response, Louisiana’s legislature and governor adopted a new House map that created a second Black majority district. But that map also was subsequently challenged in court, leading to the most recent Supreme Court ruling.

Louisiana Postpones Primaries as States Rush to Redraw Districts After Supreme Court Ruling

More governors call for special sessions following supreme court’s decision severely weakening Voting Rights Act

Adria R Walker in Jackson, Mississippi

Thu 30 Apr 2026 10.35 EDT

Louisiana moved to postpone its May primaries on Thursday in a move that came as other southern states are also scrambling to redraw congressional districts in response to the supreme court’s Wednesday ruling that severely weakened the landmark Voting Rights Act.

Before the supreme court’s decision, eliminating a key protection against racial discrimination in drawing voting maps, some states had already begun initiating processes to redraw districts and gut Black voting power. More states have now followed, with governors calling for special sessions to redraw congressional districts, potentially before the midterm elections in November.

Louisiana governor Jeff Landry and attorney general Liz Murrill, both Republicans, said in a joint statement that the state can no longer use its current districts to carry out the primaries after the supreme court ruling. Early voting had been scheduled to begin Saturday in advance of the 16 May primary.

“The State is currently enjoined from carrying out congressional elections under the current map,” Landry and Murrill said in the statement on social media Thursday. “We are working together with the Legislature and the Secretary of State’s office to develop a path forward.”

Voting districts are typically redrawn once a decade, after the census. Last year, Donald Trump triggered a round of mid-decade redistricting after he urged Texas Republicans to give a boost to the Republican party during the midterm elections. California Democrats responded in turn. From there, multiple other states began pushing redistricting, along with those whose maps were already tied up in state and federal courts.

Now, state legislatures have a new opportunity, and several southern states have already acted or indicated they will do so soon.

While it’s unclear how many states will be able to redraw their maps before the November midterm elections given that filing deadlines and in some cases primaries have passed in many states, Republicans are expected to take extreme measures to move quickly.

Before the ink on the justices’ decision had dried, Florida’s Republican-controlled legislature, called back into a special session by governor Ron DeSantis in recent weeks, passed new congressional maps to deliver four more seats to the Republican party. The map, which was already in process before the Supreme Court decision, gives Republicans the advantage for 24 of the state’s 28 House seats.

“DeSantis’s extreme new gerrymander was drawn behind closed doors because he knows the voters overwhelmingly oppose this partisan power grab,” John Bisognano, president of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, said in a statement. “Instead of standing up for their constituents, Florida Republicans have just voted to silence millions of Floridians in service of Donald Trump’s plot to steal the 2026 midterm elections.”

While Florida advanced the issue of redistricting further than any other state since the supreme court’s ruling, other Republican-controlled states seemed poised to follow.

Mississippi governor Tate Reeves announced that 21 days after the supreme court decision, the state legislature would return for a special session to address redistricting, which had been put on hold pending the decision.

Charles Taylor, executive director of the Mississippi chapter of the NAACP, said that the organization was already working to address both the decision and the special session.

A person in a crowd holding a sign that says ‘Voter Suppression is Un-American.’

“Too often in this country, Black voters bear the brunt of the political theater and I want to be clear: the Republican party and power is completely linked to the dilutions of Black voting power,” he said. “Mississippi is the Blackest state in the country and we have a governor and a legislature that is chomping at the bits, not to create equality, but to continue to suppress the Black voices and Black folks in our state. It is a sad day, but we stand ready to fight.”

Reeves celebrated the supreme court’s decision in a post on X.

“First Dobbs. Now Callais,” he wrote. “Just Mississippi and Louisiana down here saving our country!”

Like Louisiana, Alabama was sued after the 2020 redistricting cycle for violating section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The Alabama attorney general, Steve Marshall, said the state “will act as quickly as possible to apply this ruling to Alabama’s redistricting efforts”. The state has two majority Black districts, including one that voted for the first time only two years ago.

In Tennessee, shortly after the supreme court decision, Republican senator and gubernatorial candidate Marsha Blackburn wrote a post on X targeting the state’s lone majority-Black district.

“I urge our state legislature to reconvene to redistrict another Republican seat in Memphis,” she wrote alongside a photo of Tennessee redrawn to be entirely red. “It’s essential to cement @realDonaldTrump’s agenda and the Golden Age of America.”

The Associated Press contributed reporting

Mali Crisis: Who Are the Key Leaders to Know About?

As Mali faces its biggest security challenge in years, Al Jazeera profiles leaders from the government as well as armed groups.

A column of black smoke rises above buildings as vehicles pass by the Africa Tower monument in Bamako, Mali

By Shola Lawal

30 Apr 2026

Armed violence has intensified in Mali since Saturday after an al-Qaeda-linked armed group working with separatists attacked several military bases across multiple cities, including areas where senior government officials live, and took control of the northern city of Kidal.

Malian Defence Minister Sadio Camara and his family were killed in their home in Kati, a military garrison close to the capital, Bamako, the government announced on Sunday. Armed groups have announced that they are laying siege to Bamako.

Mali has been beset by security crises since at least 2012. Al-Qaeda-linked Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) controls swaths of rural territory, especially in the north and central regions, and has active cells around the capital. Similarly, the ISIL (ISIS) affiliate in Sahel Province (ISSP) controls areas in northeastern Menaka city.

At the same time, armed Tuareg separatists of the Liberation Front for Azawad (FLA) group, fighting for an independent nation called Azawad, also in the north, are clashing with the military and allied Russian mercenaries who have been deployed since 2021. They control Kidal now, along with the JNIM, but they also want Gao, the largest city in the north, Menaka and Timbuktu, to complete the self-declared state of Azawad.

These groups sometimes work together: they operate in the same areas and draw from the same pool of fighters from aggrieved communities. On Saturday, the JNIM worked with the FLA against the army.

But who are the faces behind them? Here is a breakdown of who is who in the Mali crisis:

Key figures in the Malian army

Assimi Goita: Colonel Goita, 42, is the country’s head of state. He helped the military seize power in 2020, removing the civilian government and promising to end the crisis as security deteriorated. In May 2021, he again launched a coup, this time removing the civilian members of the cabinet and installing himself as president. Although Goita initially promised to hold elections, he has since gone quiet on that front. Under him, Mali’s foreign policy has been increasingly nationalist: his government has cut off ties with the regional bloc, ECOWAS, which pressured it to hold elections. It has also cut ties with former colonial power France and evicted French troops, as well as 15,000 United Nations peacekeepers. In their place, Mali has turned to Russian mercenaries for defence. Mali also restarted an on-and-off conflict with Tuareg separatists.

Goita

Sadio Camara: Killed on Saturday in the heavily fortified Kati, General Camara was the defence minister and a key official. He was 47. Camara actively took part in the 2020 coup. When he was sidelined by the civilian cabinet and replaced as defence minister, Goita launched a total coup in 2021 and reinstated him. Camara was the brain behind the Mali-Russia partnership and helped facilitate the arrival of Russian mercenaries from the Wagner Group, who were replaced by a Russian Defence Ministry unit called Africa Corps. Mali observed two days of mourning following his assassination.

Abdoulaye Maiga – Lieutenant-Colonel Maiga, 44, has served as prime minister since 2022. He did not take part in the coups, but is a close ally of Goita and reputed to be the main voice behind the scenes, pushing for a break with France. He studied in Algeria and France, where he earned a doctorate. Maiga formerly worked with the UN and ECOWAS, from which Mali has distanced itself.

Key figures in Africa Corps/Wagner

Russian mercenaries have been fighting alongside the Malian army since 2021. There are about 2,000 Russian fighters in the country at present, with another 400 or so others in neighbouring, military-led Niger and Burkina Faso.

They were initially deployed as members of the Wagner Group. In 2023, Wagner head Yevgeny Prigozhin died, and Russia integrated the group into its Defence Ministry as the Africa Corps, which is also present in the Central African Republic, Libya, and, reportedly, in Sudan. Field commanders are hardly known, with only small details emerging.

Mali

Russian mercenaries boarding a helicopter in northern Mali [File: French Army via AP]

Major-General Andrey Averyanov – The Russian senior intelligence officer is believed to be the Africa Corps commander on the continent. He was formerly the commander of a Russian intelligence unit linked to foreign assassinations. Unconfirmed reports in early April said Averyanov was killed by a Ukrainian drone strike on a Russian shadow fleet in the Mediterranean.

Major-General Vladimir Selivyorstov – The 53-year-old is believed to be the Africa Corps commander in Mali. Formerly with the Russian air forces, he led operations of the 106th Airborne Division in Ukraine in 2022.

Key figures in the FLA

Tuareg separatists have been fighting for freedom even before Mali gained independence in 1960. There have been several waves of rebellions since – the 1960s, 90s and 2012. The FLA is the latest iteration of the separatist movements. It was formed in 2024 after previous movements merged.

MNLA

Alghabass Ag Intalla – A longtime separatist, the 54-year-old is the head of the FLA. He hails from a noble Tuareg clan in Kidal and is considered a traditional chief. Before the 2012 rebellion, Intalla was the city’s representative in parliament. Briefly, he joined the ideological al-Qaeda-linked Ansar Dine as the rebellion unfolded and separatists partnered with rebels. But he later left to rejoin the core separatist movement.

Bilal Ag Cherif – The 49-year-old is considered another key leader. He was formerly the head of the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad, the main grouping in the 2012 rebellion. At the time, he was reported to be seriously wounded in battle and transferred to Burkina Faso for treatment. He has been a key voice in past peace negotiations and the campaign for Malian refugees to return home. Cherif is from Kidal and studied in Libya in the 1990s, around the second rebellion.

Key figures in ideological armed movements

Iyad Ag Ghaly – The 72-year-old is the leader of JNIM. He was also the founder of Ansar Dine, which merged with four others in 2017 to form JNIM, reputed to have up to 10,000 fighters. Ghaly had a moderate upbringing and was, at some point, a musician. He fought in the rebellion of the 1990s and was seen as the “father” of the movement, but signed a peace accord with Bamako. He was sent to Saudi Arabia in 2008 as a diplomatic staff member. However, Ghaly was expelled in 2010 on suspicion of developing links with al-Qaeda. He returned and tried to lead separatists again, but failed. He thereafter founded the ideological Ansar Dine. The group at first participated in the 2012 rebellion with the MNLA, but eventually hijacked the movement after both sides’ motives clashed.

Amadou Khoufa – Born Amadou Diallo, the fighter and preacher is a JNIM deputy. He is of Fulani descent – a group that has long decried marginalisation in Mali. He founded Katiba Macina, a group that merged with others to form JNIM. He has long preached a strict version of Islam and pushed for an Islamic republic.

Abu al-Bara al-Sahrawi – Not much is known about him, the wali or governor of ISSP. His father, Adnan Abu Walid al-Sahrawi, was a West Saharan who fought that region’s liberation movement before moving to northern Mali and joining the armed group, al-Mourabitoun, which is now part of JNIM. In 2015, he declared allegiance to ISIL. Al-Sahrawi was killed in Mali by French soldiers in 2021, after which his son took over leadership.

Curfews, Conspiracy Theories … and a Cancelled Concert: Mali’s Capital Tries to Shrug off Violence on its Doorstep

Since 2012, Mali has faced a security crisis fueled by violence from groups linked to al-Qaida and Islamic State

Eromo Egbejule in Abidjan and Aisha Down

Thu 30 Apr 2026 09.43 EDT

“The Grand Ball of Bamako,” as organisers tagged the Saturday evening soiree at the Hotel de l’Amitié in the Malian capital, was meant to provide one of the west African country’s biggest headlines last weekend.

Many sponsors including Orange Mali, the local subsidiary of the French telecoms company, had bankrolled the show, which organisers hoped would demonstrate Mali’s capacity to put on big cultural events in the teeth of a security crisis raging on multiple fronts. On the eve of the concert, a convoy of over half a dozen cars picked up the main attraction, Grammy Award-winning Senegalese singer Youssou N’Dour, from the Modibo Keita international airport.

In the end though, N’Dour, one of the continent’s most famous voices, did not get to perform. Halfway into the concert, guests stood up from the tables draped in white and left the venue, after news reached organisers that the ruling junta had imposed a 72-hour citywide curfew. “We have been faced with a situation beyond our control,” the main organiser Abdoulaye Guitteye said on stage. “We really did our best, we tried.”

The curfew was announced in response to a coordinated attack on multiple Malian cities and towns by an unlikely alliance of jihadists and separatists. In Bamako, people had woken up at dawn on Saturday to the sounds of gunfire as the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA) and al-Qaida-linked group JNIM targeted the same airport N’Dour had come in through. Sources claim the junta granted special permission for the airport to briefly reopen later on so he could fly back to his base in Dakar.

In the high-security garrison town of Kati, only 9 miles outside Bamako, a fierce fight broke out between insurgents and security forces at the residence of defence minister Sadio Camara. Then a suicide bomber drove an explosives-laden car into the property, killing Camara along with several relatives.

Since 2012, Mali has faced a profound security crisis fuelled in particular by violence from groups affiliated with al-Qaida and the Islamic State, as well as local criminal gangs and pro-independence groups. JNIM imposed a punishing fuel blockade of Bamako last year, but it had eased in the period leading up to Saturday’s attacks.

Camara was a key junta figure and Russian speaker seen as the mastermind behind the junta’s pivot to Russia, specifically its deal with mercenary group Wagner – which later morphed into the Kremlin-controlled Africa Corps – to provide regime protection and counterinsurgency support. Along with its neighbours Burkina Faso and Niger, Mali had expelled French and American forces following the coup that brought its junta to power.

Conspiracy theories have been spreading freely: some claim the jihadists had sources near Camara who helped them breach his heavily guarded compound. “The military themselves say there had to be accomplices,” a Bamako-based consultant who did not want to give their name told the Guardian.

Simultaneous attacks took place on cities and towns around the country, including Gao, Mopti, Sévaré and Bourem. In the former separatist stronghold of Kidal near the border with southern Algeria, the Malian military and Africa Corps were overwhelmed by the militants. Algerian authorities reportedly helped the troops negotiate an exit from the city.

The attacks – the largest assault on the country in nearly 15 years – were a fresh escalation of a conflict that began in 2012 when men from the Tuareg ethnic minority who had felt sidelined since Mali’s independence from France in 1960 launched an offensive aided by weapons from the fall of the Gaddafi regime in Libya. Extremists in the north then hijacked the uprising and scaled it up to such an extent that interventions by the French military and a UN peacekeeping force failed to bring the situation under control.

The conflict also triggered three successful coups, including the one in May 2021 that installed Assimi Goïta as head of state. A few years later he pulled Mali out of the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) alongside his fellow junta leaders in Burkina Faso and Niger.

Goïta was neither seen nor heard from at the weekend, prompting speculation that the rebels had outsmarted the Turkish private military contractors protecting him, or that he had been deposed by his fellow putschists in the junta.

On Tuesday afternoon, Goïta proved the rumours wrong, resurfacing in a photo of him meeting the Russian ambassador that was posted by the Malian presidency to X. Goita later addressed the nation, saying the “enemy’s deadly plan has been thwarted”.

“These attacks are not isolated incidents, but are part of a vast destabilisation plan conceived and carried out by terrorist groups and external and internal sponsors who provide them with intelligence and logistical support,” he said, toeing the same narrative as Moscow’s defence ministry, which claimed without evidence to have thwarted a coup backed by western forces.

Authorities in Bamako and Moscow have confirmed that there were civilian and military losses, but have not given casualty figures. The military also said it had killed more than 200 terrorists.

Analysts say the Russians will now focus on safeguarding the capital and the presidency. The Bamako-based consultant doubts the militants can take Bamako due to superior military numbers but knows the threat is ever-present. The jihadists and separatists “know the mountains and the trails” better than the army, and travel on motorcycles, he said. “They are in control. They have prepared for this.”

A Bamako-based consultant

As people go about their daily lives, the city has remained on high alert. “Even this morning, the children went to school but there’s panic and many people are staying at home,” said the consultant, who lives in a suburb on the outskirts of Bamako and has not left his house since Saturday.

On social media, videos are circulating from the jihadists telling people in Bambara, the most widely spoken language in the country, not to leave the capital. One video with an upbeat musical soundtrack appears to show a militant spray-painting over the government’s signage in downtown Kidal while flashing a peace sign at the camera. The Guardian could not independently verify the footage.

Throughout the day on Saturday, the concert’s organisers resisted calls to cancel the event in light of the fast-moving security situation in part because the venue, a few blocks from the French embassy, is seen as one of the safest places in the capital.

The attempt to keep the show on the road reflected a desire among many people living in Bamako to try to lead as normal and spirited a life as possible. This attitude is encouraged by the junta, which has long sought to project an image of stability.

In December, even as the fuel blockade upended daily life for millions of ordinary people, a biennale was held in the ancient city of Timbuktu. And last weekend couples went ahead with weddings across Bamako despite the violence.

A woman from Bamako who attended the Timbuktu festival said this week:

“This is what I tell people: ‘Either we decide to live, or we decide to remain terrorised’ … what a lot of people have also written on their [social medi

Russian Paramilitary Carried Out Air Strikes in Mali as Rebels Advanced, Footage Shows

Matt Murphy, Paul Brown and Peter Mwai, BBC Verify

BBC Footage of an airstrike against rebel vehicles in Mali. It is imposed over the BBC Verify colours and branding. BBC

A Russian paramilitary launched air strikes against rebel forces near Mali's capital Bamako, video footage shows, following a shock offensive against the ruling military government.

Jihadist and Tuareg separatist forces on Saturday carried out attacks across Mali and killed the country's Defence Minister Sadio Camara. Russian forces claimed up to 12,000 fighters took part in the offensive.

The Kremlin-controlled Africa Corps, which supports Malian military operations, has posted several videos since Saturday showing air strikes and attack helicopters engaging with rebel troops. BBC Verify located the clips to the town of Kati, around 20km (12 miles) from Bamako.

Despite the show of force, the mercenaries confirmed that they have pulled out of Kidal in northern Mali, which housed significant numbers of troops and was at the core of the military's operations in the region. Verified footage now shows rebels roaming the base.

Mali has fought a long-running conflict against a broad array of rebel groups for more than a decade. Military leaders seized power in 2020 after accusing the civilian administration of failing to properly manage the security situation.

Since then the military has had limited success targeting the al-Qaeda linked Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) group and the separatist Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), with Bamako coming under a blockade late last year.

But the latest attacks mark a "major escalation in the conflict" between the military government and the rebels, said Jean-Hervé Jezequel, Sahel director with the International Crisis Group. Fighting has been recorded across the country, with BBC Verify confirming 22 videos showing rebel movements in seven locations since Saturday.

"Whereas JNIM's strategy initially relied primarily on conquering rural or peripheral areas, it now also targets major cities," Jezequel said.

A satellite images showing the location of the defence minister's home and showing the damage caused by the attack. 

In Saturday's attack, rebels targeted the defence minister's residence in Kati. A government spokesperson said Camara was killed in a firefight after a suicide bomber drove an explosives-laden vehicle into his home.

Satellite images showed that the area was heavily damaged in the attack, with Camara's property completely leveled in the explosion and extensive damage to the rest of the block.

The Africa Corps responded to the attacks on Kati with a series of airstrikes. Drone footage showed a dramatic missile attack on a convoy of rebel pick-up trucks as they sped along a highway on the outskirts of the town, with a fireball erupting as they were hit by the attack.

Another clip filmed from the cockpit of an attack helicopter showed missiles being launched at targets on the ground, while another from the outskirts of the town showed smoke rising after an attack by a Russian helicopter.

Russia's Wagner Group mercenaries arrived in Mali in 2021 in the lead-up to the withdrawal of French troops amid a breakdown in relations between the ruling junta and the West. They were replaced by the Africa Corps, which is directly controlled by Moscow, amid Kremlin moves to curb the independence of Russian mercenary groups.

Dr Sorcha MacLeod, an ex-member of the UN's working group on mercenaries and lecturer at the University of Copenhagen, said the group maintained Wagner's arrangement with the Malian junta - providing security services in exchange for payments and "access to valuable natural resources".

But the force, which a senior French military official told BBC Verify last year was limited to about 2,500 troops, has struggled to arrest the growing momentum of JNIM and the FLA.

The withdrawal from Kidal will also be a significant loss for the Malian government. The pivotal facility, which the Wagner Group and Malian forces seized after an extended, bloody battle at the end of 2023 was home to a large, heavily armed force.

But Russian and Malian personnel appear to have come under heavy attack in the lead-up to the withdrawal, with footage posted by JNIM militants showing a large group of soldiers fleeing from a truck ahead of a drone strike.

An image showing rebel fighters at a base in Kidal. One image shows fighters on a truck armed with rifles, while another shows a fighters carrying an RPG inside the base. 

Before the withdrawal announcement was made, verified videos located to the base by BBC Verify showed military vehicles evacuating.

The Africa Corps claimed to have removed "heavy equipment" from the base ahead of its withdrawal, but clips shared by rebel troops in the aftermath showed that armoured personnel carriers, patrol vehicles and jeeps were left behind in the hasty retreat.

Charlie Werb, an analyst with Aldebaran Threat Consultants, noted that while the loss of such equipment will be keenly felt by the military, there is no guarantee that the rebels will be able to adapt heavy, armoured vehicles to "insurgent-style tactics that rely on speed, manoeuvrability, and concealment".

A graphic showing the locations of rebel troops across Mali. 

Malian troops have also pulled out of the town of Tessalit further north, while clashes took place near the main Africa Corps facility in Bamako. One clip showed a Russian mercenary firing an assault rifle from a guard post on the periphery of the compound.

"Other states that have hired Africa Corps will be watching very closely," Dr MacLeod said, adding that some may question the paramilitary's value-for-money in light of its struggles in the north.

"The model offered by Moscow isn't working but at the same time is costing poor countries millions in natural resources. It's unsustainable."

Additional reporting by Jacob Boswall, Thomas Spencer, Kumar Malhotra and Sherie Ryder.

Supreme Court Weakens the Voting Rights Act and Aids GOP Efforts to Control the House

By MARK SHERMAN

12:11 AM EDT, April 30, 2026

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Wednesday hollowed out a landmark Civil Rights-era law that has increased minority representation in Congress and elsewhere, striking down a majority Black congressional district in Louisiana and opening the door for more redistricting across the country that could aid Republican efforts to control the House.

In a 6-3 ruling, the court’s conservative majority found that the Louisiana district represented by Democrat Cleo Fields relied too heavily on race. Chief Justice John Roberts had described the 6th Congressional District as a “snake” that stretches more than 200 miles (320 kilometers) to link parts of Shreveport, Alexandria, Lafayette and Baton Rouge.

“That map is an unconstitutional gerrymander,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote for the six conservatives.

The effect of the ruling may be felt more strongly in 2028 because most filing deadlines for this year’s congressional races have passed. Louisiana, though, may have to change its redistricting plan to comply with the decision.

It is unclear how much of the provision — known as Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 — remains.

When he signed the bill —the main way to challenge racially discriminatory election practices —into law more than 60 years ago, President Lyndon Johnson called it “a triumph for freedom as huge as any victory on any battlefield.”

In her dissent for the three liberal justices, Justice Elena Kagan wrote that the court’s “gutting of Section 2 puts that achievement in peril.”

Her sentiment was shared by former President Barack Obama, who said the decision showed “how a majority of the current Court seems intent on abandoning its vital role in ensuring equal participation in our democracy.”

In a statement, Fields said the decision’s “practical effect is to make it far harder for minority communities to challenge redistricting maps that dilute their political voice.”

Potential political fallout

The voting rights law succeeded in opening the ballot box to Black Americans and reducing persistent discrimination in voting. Nearly 70 of the 435 congressional districts are protected by Section 2, election law expert Nicholas Stephanopoulos has estimated.

Alito wrote that “allowing race to play any part in government decisionmaking represents a departure from the constitutional rule that applies in almost every other context.” He said Section 2 is effectively limited to instances of intentional discrimination, a very high standard.

Kagan said the upshot of the decision is that states “can, without legal consequence, systematically dilute minority citizens’ voting power.”

Reaction to the decision broke along partisan lines.

“This is a complete and total victory for American voters. The color of one’s skin should not dictate which congressional district you belong in. We commend the court for putting an end to the unconstitutional abuse of the Voting Rights Act and protecting civil rights,” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson wrote in an email.

The chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee called the decision “appalling.” Rep. Suzan DelBene of Washington state said it was the latest in a long line of attacks by President Donald Trump and the conservative court “against the fundamental right of every American citizen to vote.”

She said Democrats remained poised to regain the House majority in November “despite this corrupt and targeted assault on the voting rights of Black and Brown Americans from the Supreme Court.”

A ruling Trump likes

Trump had touched off a nationwide redistricting competition this year to boost Republican chances of preserving their House edge. The president said some states should redraw their maps and he called the decision the “kind of ruling I like.”

Legislatures already are free to draw extremely partisan districts because of a 2019 Supreme Court decision.

Wednesday’s ruling came out as Florida legislators debated a proposed redrawing of the state’s congressional lines, submitted by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis and intended to give the GOP a chance to pick up as many as four seats in the state’s U.S. House delegation.

Democrats in the Florida Senate urged the Republican supermajority to delay debate, at least long enough to allow lawmakers to read the decision and consult lawyers about how it might affect DeSantis’ proposal. Republicans refused and the Legislature approved the new map.

In the Supreme Court’s Louisiana ruling, the justices did an about-face from a decision in a similar case from Alabama less than three years ago that led to a new congressional map for the state that sent two Black Democrats to Congress.

The Alabama decision also prompted Louisiana lawmakers to add a second majority Black district. About a third of Louisianans are Black and they now form majorities in two of the state’s six congressional districts. Alabama has a separate appeal pending at the Supreme Court

Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh joined the three liberals to form a majority in the Alabama case, the same term in which the conservative-dominated court ended affirmative action in college admissions. Both joined Alito’s opinion Wednesday.

Roberts has long eyed Voting Rights Act

The chief justice has been at the center of the effort to limit the use of race in public life. He has had the Voting Rights Act in his sights since his time as a young lawyer in the Reagan-era Justice Department.

“It is a sordid business, this divvying us up by race,” Roberts wrote in a dissenting opinion in 2006 in his first major voting rights case as chief justice.

In 2013, Roberts wrote for the majority in gutting the law’s requirement that states and local governments with a history of discrimination, mostly in the South, get approval before making any election-related changes.

“Our country has changed, and while any racial discrimination in voting is too much, Congress must ensure that the legislation it passes to remedy that problem speaks to current conditions,” Roberts wrote.

Barring extraordinary action, the broader impact probably will be felt in 2028, when Republicans potentially can replace more than a dozen Democratic-held House districts that were previously protected under the Voting Rights Act.

“The Voting Rights Act as a means to protect minority voters from vote dilution is essentially dead,” said Jonathan Cervas, a political scientist at Carnegie Mellon University who has served as an outside legal expert in multiple Voting Rights Act cases.

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Associated Press writers Sara Cline in Baton Rouge, La., Nicholas Riccardi in Denver, Bill Barrow in Tallahassee, Fla., and Lisa Mascaro and Seung Ming Kim contributed to this report.

Critically Endangered Antelopes Return to Kenya from Czech Zoo

By EVELYNE MUSAMBI

7:26 AM EDT, April 29, 2026

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Four critically endangered mountain bongos arrived in Kenya on their way to their native forests after years in the care of a zoo in the Czech Republic.

Bongos, rare antelopes known for their striking stripes, have been declared critically endangered due to poaching and diseases. There are fewer than 100 mountain bongos left in the wild, according to the Kenyan government. Many were sent to Europe in the 1980s after a major rinderpest disease outbreak killed thousands.

The returnees arrived from Dvur Kralove Zoo in wooden crates at Kenya’s main airport and were received by the Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi and Tourism Minister Rebecca Miano, who hailed it as a “homecoming of the majestic bongos.”

It’s the third such return in recent years, with the previous one in February 2025. After a period of quarantine and acclimatization, the bongos will be sent to the Mount Kenya Wildlife Conservancy, which houses 102 bongos, before being released into the wild.

The conservancy runs a national recovery plan for the mountain bongo in collaboration with the government and plans to use the four bongos to interbreed and strengthen the gene pool.

Kenyan-raised nature explorers and filmmakers Jahawi and Elke Bertolli told The Associated Press that the bongos will bring genetic variation that is critical for their conservation, adding that the species plays a key role in protecting the forests that are vital to Kenya’s water supply.

Czech Republic Ambassador Nicol Adamcova said the relocation reflects a long-standing partnership between the Czech Republic and Kenya in conservation and a shared commitment to protecting endangered species.

Mudavadi said such milestones show what can be achieved when policy, science, and collaboration come together in pursuit of a shared conservation goal.

Kenya Gives a Hero’s Welcome to Marathon Record Breaker Sabastian Sawe

By EVELYNE MUSAMBI

3:14 AM EDT, April 30, 2026

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Marathon record-breaker Sabastian Sawe received a hero’s welcome in Kenya, complete with a water cannon salute on Wednesday for the aircraft he was aboard.

On Thursday, he was awarded $61,000 and a car by the president.

Sawe, the first person to officially break the two-hour barrier in an marathon, was welcomed home by his parents and Sports Minister Salim Mvurya, who hailed the runner’s accomplishment at the London Marathon as “a win for Kenya.”

President William Ruto held a more formal welcoming ceremony Thursday, where he described Sawe’s win as “a defining moment in the history of human endurance.”

Sawe gave President Ruto an autographed Adidas Adizero shoe worn during Sunday’s marathon. He also autographed a photo of the moment he broke the world record.

Sawe made history on Sunday when he won in a time of 1 hour, 59 minutes, 30 seconds. He bettered the previous men’s world record by 65 seconds.

On arrival Wednesday at Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, Sawe told The Associated Press he was proud to have “made a great achievement in life” and was planning to “try and lower the record further.”

He was adorned with a traditional wreath made from twigs to symbolize victory.

Traditional dancers sang his praises as he then climbed into a luxury government vehicle as part of the “heroic welcome” hailed by the sports minister.

Sawe’s parents told The AP they knew their son was destined for greatness even as a child. His mother recounted how he sprinted during bath time.

“He would run too fast. So, I would say to myself, this boy will shine for me one day,” Emily Sawe said.

His father recounted some tension watching Sunday’s marathon because of the television lacked a clear signal.

“The moment my son pulled in front, I walked out and didn’t see him finish the race. I watched the replay afterwards. I was so happy, extremely happy. We screamed so much that now it is hard to swallow anything,” Simion Kiplagat Sawe said.

Sabastian Sawe was introduced to professional running by his uncle, Abraham Chepkirwok, who ran the 800 meters for Uganda at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Sawe won the Valencia Marathon in 2024, clocking 2:02:05. He went into Sunday’s race in London as the defending champion.

His father says Sawe is disciplined and determined: “Even now, he still says that record was not enough; he wants to lower it further.”