Friday, May 15, 2026

Students Missing Following Attack by Armed Groups on School in Northeastern Nigeria, Police Say

By HARUNA UMAR

3:36 PM EDT, May 15, 2026

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (AP) — An unspecified number of students are missing after suspected jihadi militants attacked a secondary school in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno state on Friday, police told The Associated Press.

Several students cannot be accounted for after the attack, Nahum Daso, Borno police spokesperson said, adding that it is unclear if students were abducted and they can only confirm details of many students who “fled for safety during the pandemonium.”

The attack happened early morning in Askira-Uba, which borders the Sambisa Forest — a stronghold for armed groups — and was carried out by militants from Muslim militant group Boko Haram and its splinter group Islamic State West Africa Province, according to the police spokesperson.

Abduction of school children is common in Nigeria, where the government is battling several armed groups across the country. Analysts say the armed groups, including Boko Haram, often target schools for high ransoms as they tend to gain the government’s attention.

Residents said the militants already abducted dozens of the students.

“Two of my nieces, both under the age of 10, were among the pupils taken away to an unknown destination,” said a resident who spoke to the AP anonymously for fear of reprisal.

The police said a headcount is still ongoing to determine if there was an abduction.

Last year, two mass abductions from schools rocked the West African nation, with over 300 children taken in the conflict-battered northern region.

A New Ebola Outbreak is Confirmed in a Remote Congo Province, with 65 Deaths Recorded

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

4:14 PM EDT, May 15, 2026

KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — Africa’s top public health body on Friday confirmed a new Ebola outbreak in Congo’s remote Ituri province, with 246 suspected cases and 65 deaths recorded so far.

Neighboring Uganda later confirmed one death in an Ebola case it said was imported from Congo.

The deaths and suspected cases have been recorded mainly in the Mongwalu and Rwampara health zones, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said in a statement. The agency said 65 deaths have been attributed to the outbreak and that four of those have so far been confirmed in a laboratory.

Ebola is highly contagious and can be contracted through bodily fluids such as vomit, blood or semen. The disease it causes is rare, but severe and often fatal.

Scientists were trying to determine exactly what virus was driving the current outbreak in Congo. The Ebola virus — also known as the Ebola Zaire strain — has been prominent in Congo’s past outbreaks. Results so far suggest some variant other than the Ebola Zaire strain, with sequencing continuing to give more clarity, the Africa CDC said.

The World Health Organization says the Ebola disease is caused by a group of viruses, and that three of them are known to cause large outbreaks: Ebola virus, Sudan virus and Bundibugyo virus.

Uganda on Friday reported one Ebola case involving a Congolese man admitted to a hospital in Kampala three days before he died. Officials said the case was “imported” from Congo, and that Uganda has not yet confirmed any local cases.

Uganda’s Health Ministry said the patient was tested posthumously on Friday after neighboring Congo confirmed its Ebola outbreak. All contacts linked to the man have been quarantined, the agency said. The deceased’s body has been taken back to Congo.

The ministry said the person was infected with the Bundibugyo virus, a variant of the illness that has been endemic in Uganda.

The WHO said last year that Congo has a stockpile of treatments and some 2,000 doses of the Ervebo Ebola vaccine. The Ervedo vaccine is effective against the Ebola Zaire strain — considered the most severe one — but not against the Sudan virus or Bundibugyo virus, according to health authorities.

Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, World Health Organization director-general, told reporters Friday that the WHO last week sent a team to help Congo investigate the outbreak and collect samples. While initial results did not confirm Ebola, a new analysis on Thursday did, he said.

Congo has “a strong track record in Ebola response and control,” Tedros said, adding that the WHO is releasing $500,000 to aid Congo’s response.

Affected areas are close to Uganda, South Sudan borders

The latest outbreak comes around five months after Congo’s last Ebola outbreak was declared over after 43 deaths.

Ituri is in a remote eastern part of Congo characterized by poor road networks, more than 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) from the nation’s capital of Kinshasa.

Africa CDC said it is concerned about the risk of further spread due to intense population movement, mining-related mobility in Mongwalu, insecurity in affected areas, gaps in contact listing and control challenges.

The proximity of affected areas to Uganda and South Sudan also raises concerns, it said.

The agency said it was convening an urgent coordination meeting Friday with health authorities from Congo, Uganda and South Sudan, together with key partners including U.N. agencies and other countries.

The acting head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Jay Bhattacharya, said Friday that U.S. health officials are in contact with officials in Congo and Uganda and are “going to provide whatever they need and that we are capable of providing them.”

Congo has seen more than a dozen Ebola outbreaks

This is the 17th outbreak in Congo since the disease first emerged in the country in 1976. An Ebola outbreak from 2018 to 2020 in eastern Congo killed more than 1,000 people. The WHO said that outbreak was characterized by the main Ebola Zaire strain.

An earlier outbreak that swept across West Africa from 2014 to 2016 also killed more than 11,000 people.

The new outbreak creates more worry for the Central African country, which has been battling various armed groups in the east. The second-largest African country in land mass, Congo also faces logistical challenges. During last year’s outbreak, which lasted three months, the WHO initially faced significant challenges in delivering vaccines due to limited access.

Dr. Gabriel Nsakala, a professor of public health who has been involved in past Ebola outbreak responses in Congo, said the country and health workers on the ground have a high level of experience, in addition to existing infrastructure such as laboratories.

“In terms of training, people already know what they can do. Now, the expertise and equipment need to be delivered quickly,” Nsakala added.

——

Associated Press writers Chinedu Asadu in Abuja, Nigeria; Saleh Mwanamilongo in Bonn, Germany; Mark Banchereau in Dakar, Senegal; Mike Stobbe in New York City and Evelyne Musambi in Nairobi, Kenya contributed.

A Look at Major Ebola Outbreaks and When the Disease Was First Identified

By GERALD IMRAY

12:04 PM EDT, May 15, 2026

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — African health officials say there is a new Ebola outbreak in the Central African country of Congo, with at least 246 suspected cases and 65 deaths.

The severe disease that is often fatal was first identified in 1976 after two outbreaks in quick succession in what is now South Sudan and Congo, according to the World Health Organization.

All the major Ebola outbreaks have been in sub-Saharan Africa, where the viruses that cause it are native. The worst have been in West and Central Africa.

Ebola has a high fatality rate

Ebola disease is caused by a group of viruses. Three of them are known to cause large outbreaks: Ebola virus, Sudan virus and Bundibugyo virus, WHO says.

A family of fruit bats are believed to be the natural hosts of the viruses that cause Ebola, and other animals like apes and monkeys can also be infected, according to WHO.

People can be infected by these animals, and the viruses can spread from person to person through contact with the body fluids like the blood, feces or vomit of an infected person, or surfaces that have been contaminated by body fluids.

Symptoms appear from two days to three weeks after exposure, though they usually emerge within about a week, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A new Ebola outbreak is confirmed in a remote Congo province, with 65 deaths recorded

A new Ebola outbreak is confirmed in a remote Congo province, with 65 deaths recorded

What to know about the Ebola outbreak blamed for scores of deaths in Congo

What to know about the Ebola outbreak blamed for scores of deaths in Congo

Congo says its mpox outbreak is over after 2 years and more than 2,200 suspected deaths

Congo says its mpox outbreak is over after 2 years and more than 2,200 suspected deaths

Illnesses begin with flu-like symptoms, including fever, aches, fatigue and sore throat. Later, patients can experience gastrointestinal problems, rashes, seizures and bleeding.


The average fatality rate for Ebola is around 50%, according to WHO, with rates varying from 25% to 90% in previous outbreaks.

There are approved vaccines and treatments only for the Ebola virus.

2013-2016: The worst outbreak on record

An outbreak a decade ago across several countries in West Africa is the worst on record.

There were more than 28,000 cases and more than 11,000 deaths as the highly contagious disease spread widely in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone and spilled over into nearby nations. A small number of cases were also reported in the United States, the U.K., Italy and Spain linked to travelers from Africa or health workers returning from Africa after helping with the outbreak.

The epidemic was believed to have started in southeastern Guinea when a child — “patient zero” — came into contact with infected fruit bats, according to researchers.

2018-2020: Congo and Uganda

The second-biggest outbreak in history occurred soon after in Congo’s North Kivu, South Kivu and Ituri provinces, with some cases in neighboring Uganda. The latest outbreak announced Friday is also in Ituri, on the border with Uganda.

The outbreak eight years ago had more than 3,400 reported cases and more than 2,200 deaths with a fatality rate of 66%, according to the CDC.

Like the 2013-2016 outbreak, the one in Congo was caused by the Ebola virus.

Congo has had more than a dozen significant previous outbreaks, including one as recent as late 2025.

2000-2001: Uganda

There were 425 reported cases and 224 deaths in an outbreak in Uganda caused this time by the Sudan virus.

Authorities in the East African country were praised for their quick response to the outbreak and limiting its spread. Community work involved educating people on the disease and dispelling misinformation on how it’s spread.

Uganda has also had several outbreaks.

1976: The first known outbreaks

The first known outbreak of Ebola occurred 50 years ago in towns in what was then Sudan and now part of South Sudan. Scientists believe it originated in a cotton factory where workers had contact with bats that were in warehouses, though the source has not been confirmed. It was caused by what later became known as the Sudan virus.

At least 151 people died and 284 cases were reported — many after sick people were taken to hospitals and spread the disease to health workers and others while it was still unknown, according to later studies.

An outbreak months later in northern Congo — which was then called Zaire — had 280 deaths and an extremely high fatality rate and first led scientists to identify the Ebola virus. That outbreak started in a remote village near the Ebola River, which the disease was named after.

The first known Ebola infection outside Africa occurred the same year when a British laboratory technician accidentally pricked himself with a needle while studying samples. He recovered.

Very few cases have been recorded outside Africa since Ebola was identified.

What to Know About the Ebola Outbreak Blamed for Scores of Deaths in DR Congo

By CHINEDU ASADU

Africa’s top public health body has confirmed a new Ebola outbreak in Congo’s Ituri province, the 17th since the disease first emerged in the country in 1976.

A total of 246 suspected cases and 65 deaths in Congo have already been recorded in the new outbreak, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said in a statement on Friday.

In neighboring Uganda, an Ebola case has been confirmed in a man from Congo who died in a hospital in the capital, Kampala. Ugandan officials said the man was tested posthumously.

Here’s what to know about the health crisis:

The outbreak in Congo is in a remote locality

The suspected Ebola cases have mainly been recorded in Ituri’s Mongwalu and Rwampara health zones. Suspected cases have also been reported in Bunia, the capital of Ituri province.

So far, only four of the deaths reported are laboratory-confirmed cases, but the new outbreak was confirmed after many suspected cases.

Ituri is in a remote eastern part of Congo with poor road networks, and is more than 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) from the nation’s capital, Kinshasa.

One major concern, the Africa CDC said, is the proximity of affected areas to Uganda and South Sudan. Bunia, Ituri’s main city, is near the border with Uganda.

The agency said there’s also risk of further spread due to intense population movement and attacks by armed groups that have killed dozens and displaced thousands in parts of Ituri province in the past year.

There are also gaps in contact tracing, the Africa CDC said, as local authorities race to find those who might have been exposed to the virus.

An unusual strain

Africa CDC said results so far suggest a variant of illness other than the Ebola virus, also known as the Ebola Zaire strain. It said sequencing is ongoing to further characterize the strain, with results expected within the next 24 hours.

The Ebola Zaire strain was prominent in Congo’s past outbreaks, including the 2018 to 2020 outbreak in the eastern region that killed more than 1,000 people.

The World Health Organization says the Ebola disease is caused by a group of viruses, and that three of them are known to cause large outbreaks: Ebola virus, Sudan virus and Bundibugyo virus.

WHO said during Congo’s Ebola outbreak last year that the country has a stockpile of treatments and some 2,000 doses of vaccine. However, the vaccine is for the Ebola virus, not the Sudan or Bundibugyo viruses.

Dr. Gabriel Nsakala, a professor of public health who has been involved in past Ebola outbreak responses in Congo, said treatments for viral infections like Ebola are often directed at symptoms and that efforts regarding vaccines would become clearer when the strain in the new outbreak is confirmed.

In Uganda, authorities said the case confirmed there was of the Bundibugyo virus, a strain that has been endemic to that country. However, health officials said the case was “imported” from Congo and that there had been no local cases detected.

Ugandan health officials said contacts linked to that case have been quarantined, including a high-risk contact who is a close relative of the deceased.

Urgent efforts to contain the outbreak

The Africa CDC convened an urgent high-level coordination meeting Friday with health authorities from Congo, Uganda and South Sudan, together with key partners including U.N. agencies and other countries.

The meeting, the agency said, was set to focus on immediate response priorities, cross-border coordination, surveillance, safe and dignified burials and resource mobilization, among other areas.

Congo and health workers on the ground have a high level of experience from past outbreaks, in addition to existing infrastructure such as laboratories, Nsakala said. “Now, the expertise and equipment need to be delivered quickly,” he added.

Possible logistical challenges in Congo

Congo is Africa’s second-largest country by land area and often faces logistical challenges in responding to disease outbreaks due to bad roads and long distances.

During last year’s outbreak, which lasted three months, the WHO initially faced significant challenges in delivering vaccines, which took a week after the outbreak was confirmed.

Funding has also been problematic. During last year’s outbreak, health officials were concerned about the impact of recent U.S. funding cuts.

The U.S. had supported the response to Congo’s past Ebola outbreaks, including in 2021 when the U.S. Agency for International Development provided up to $11.5 million to support efforts across Africa.

How Ebola is transmitted

The Ebola virus is highly contagious and can be transmitted to people from wild animals. It then spreads in the human population through contact with bodily fluids such as vomit, blood or semen, and with surfaces and materials such as bedding and clothing contaminated with these fluids.

The disease it causes is a rare but severe — and often fatal — illness in people. Symptoms include fever, vomiting, diarrhea, muscle pain and at times internal and external bleeding.

The virus was first discovered in 1976, near the Ebola River in what is now Congo. The first outbreaks occurred in remote villages in Central Africa, near tropical rainforests.

——

Saleh Mwanamilongo in Bonn, Germany, contributed.

Latin American Nationals Deported by the US to DR Congo Face an Uncertain Future

By MARK BANCHEREAU

10:14 AM EDT, May 15, 2026

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — It’s an existence that Congo’s president has described as “living the Congolese dream.” For the 15 Latin Americans deported to the African nation under the Trump administration’s widely criticized crackdown on migrants, it feels more like a nightmare.

The Associated Press spoke with one, a 29-year old Colombian woman who confirmed what people deported to other African nations have described: A shackled deportation despite a U.S. immigration judge’s protection order. Confinement in a hotel with supervised outings.

And an impossible choice: Return to a home country with the risk of persecution or stay in Congo, a country the Colombian woman had never heard of before she arrived.

“They treat us like we’re children,” she said as their three-month Congolese visas near an end, with no plan in sight.

“What would one do in a completely unknown place, without a place to live and without knowing what to do?” she added, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

It was not immediately clear what a new U.S. court ruling, saying the U.S. likely broke the law by deporting a fellow Colombian to Congo, will mean for her.

A United Nations-affiliated group plays a central role

In her interview from the hotel in Congo’s capital, Kinshasa, where she and other deportees are held, the woman gave new details about the central role that a United Nations-affiliated body, the International Organization for Migration, is playing.

She said deportees are allowed to leave the hotel about once a week and only accompanied by IOM staff. When they shop at a supermarket or withdraw money they are quickly ushered back to their vehicle, with IOM staff never out of sight.

“They choose where we go and what we buy,” she said.

At the hotel, she said, IOM staff have organized activities like painting, music and volleyball but many deportees have stopped participating, bored with the routine. She goes for meals and remains in her room otherwise, making late-night calls to her 10-year-old daughter in Colombia and worrying when she will see her again.

Most striking is the role IOM staff are playing in presenting deportees with their possible fates.

They have offered the woman two paths: Return to Colombia, where a U.S. judge has ruled she cannot safely be sent back, while receiving IOM “protection and assistance,” or remain in Congo with no support.

“They are given impossible choices,” said Alma David, the woman’s U.S.-based attorney. “By deporting them to a third country with no opportunity to contest being sent there, the U.S. not only violated their due process rights but our own immigration laws and our obligations under international treaties.”

Congo is one of at least eight African countries that have made deals with the Trump administration to facilitate deportations of third-country nationals, which legal experts say are effectively a legal loophole for the U.S. Most deportees had received legal orders of protection from U.S. judges shielding them against being returned to their home countries, lawyers said.

The AP has interviewed others sent to African nations who were forced to make risky decisions, such as a gay Moroccan asylum-seeker deported to Cameroon, a country where homosexuality is illegal.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not respond to questions about the Colombian woman’s case, but it has asserted that third-country deportation agreements “ensure due process under the U.S. Constitution.” The Trump administration says the agreements are needed to “remove criminal illegal aliens” whose country of origin will not take them back.

Details of Congo’s deal with US are unclear

The details of Congo’s deal with the Trump administration are not clear. Other countries have received millions of dollars to participate.

Earlier this month, Congolese President FĂ©lix Tshisekedi called the agreement an “act of goodwill between partners,” with no financial compensation. It comes as Washington has ramped up pressure on neighboring Rwanda over its support for the M23 rebel group that has seized cities in eastern Congo — a dynamic some analysts say may explain Kinshasa’s willingness to take deportees.

“We agreed to do so as a friendly gesture, simply because it was what the Americans wanted,” Tshisekedi said, adding that the migrants are free to leave Congo at any time.

“We understand that psychologically they must be unsettled because, at first, they dreamed of living the American dream, and now they are living the Congolese dream — in a country they probably did not know and may never even have noticed on a map of the world,” Tshisekedi said.

Congolese human rights groups have called it a violation of international refugee law. The Congo-based Institute for Human Rights Research described the situation as “arbitrary detention by proxy for the United States.”

The current U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement policy says if a government has made blanket diplomatic assurances that it won’t persecute people who are deported, no further process is required for deportation, not even giving deportees notice where they are being sent, said David, the attorney.

“When they told me they were going to deport me, I almost fainted,” the Colombian woman said. She was told about Congo the day before the flight.

She was detained at a routine check-in with ICE

She said she left Colombia in 2024, following threats from armed groups and abuse by a former partner who worked for the government.

She went to Mexico, where she waited for a border appointment booked with the U.S. government. When she presented herself at an Arizona port of entry in September 2024, immigration officials determined she had a credible fear of persecution, clearing her to apply for asylum, but kept her in ICE detention.

“You spend a year and a half locked up, living the same day over and over again. You see fights, punishments where people are locked in cells for many hours. You lose your privacy even to use the bathroom,” she said.

Some officers made racist remarks. “They made derogatory comments toward us as migrants, shouted at us all the time and sometimes denied basic things like showers as punishment,” she said.

In May 2025, a federal judge granted her protection under the U.N. Convention Against Torture, ruling she could not be safely returned to Colombia, according to court documents seen by the AP.

She filed a habeas corpus petition and won her release in February. She moved to Texas and was required to wear a GPS monitoring device, but at her first check-in appointment with ICE, she was detained again.

“All they told me was that I was under detention, as they had found a third country for me,” she said.

Less than three weeks later, she was put on a plane to Congo. She and the other deportees arrived on April 17 after a nearly 24-hour charter flight during which their hands and feet were restrained.

She doesn’t feel safe in Congo

Now they stay at a hotel near Kinshasa’s airport, in tidy white bungalows. Congo’s government covers the cost, the IOM said. It was not clear whether that would last after the deportees’ visas run out.

The hotel gates are locked according to one of the deportees lawyers. The Colombian woman also said security personnel do not let them leave on their own.

They were told they could apply for asylum, an option no one has chosen. “I don’t feel safe in Congo,” the woman said.

An IOM spokesperson said the organization has provided her with humanitarian assistance based on an assessment of her vulnerability. It includes “protection interventions, referrals, rights safeguarding and promotion of migrants’ overall well-being,” with no details.

The IOM also may offer “assisted voluntary return” — covering documents, flights, transit and temporary housing on arrival — with migrants’ consent.

The IOM said it plays no role in determining who is deported and reserves the right to withdraw its assistance for deportees if “minimum protection standards” aren’t met.

The Colombian woman remains in limbo, anxious. She said the food “has made us very sick,” with stomach ailments ongoing.

Local languages, like French and Lingala, are as foreign as her surroundings.

“The worst part is having to go through all of that without having committed any crime, simply for going to another country to ask for safety and protection.”

The Empire of Theft: France, US and UAE’s Hidden War on Africa

By Norris McDonald

Jamaica Gleaner

Mali has been in the news with shocking reports of a car bombing that allegedly killed Defence Minister General Sadio Camara and members of his family. This dastardly attack was followed by a coordinated terrorist offensive involving thousands of armed fighters targeting the capital Bamako, the international airport, and other major cities.

Camara was a key figure in consolidating a more cohesive West African military alliance and strengthening ties with Russia. By targeting such a figure, foreign powers likely hoped the Malian army would flounder, leaving the nation vulnerable to renewed external influence and continued resource exploitation.

Sections of the Western press celebrated prematurely. Yet with assistance from Russia Africa Corps, the military forces of Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso have reportedly inflicted major defeats on Western-backed mercenary forces in the region.

ARAB GULF COMPLICITY 

For many observers, the attack in Mali resembles patterns previously seen in Syria, where externally enabled militant networks rapidly transformed the political landscape. The rise of Ahmed al-Sharra, the Al Nusra (Al Qaeda) leader who later emerged as Syria’s president, remains controversial evidence, for critics of Western foreign policy, of how militant actors can be rehabilitated when geopolitical interests shift. 

What we are witnessing is not entirely new.

The Arab Gulf states – including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates – have long been accused by critics and investigators of helping facilitate financial networks connected to extremist groups, often alongside the geopolitical objectives of American, French, and British intelligence operations. 

The US House Financial Services Committee Report of March 11, 2003 pointed to some of these concerns. More historically, Operation Cyclone remains one of the clearest examples of the CIA’s support for Islamist militant networks during the Afghan war against the Soviet Union, including forces connected to Osama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda.

The larger question therefore becomes: what drives these recurring cycles of terrorism, instability, and war?

THE PAN-AFRICAN STRUGGLE 

Mali and much of West Africa are not simply facing problems of religious or ethnic conflict. While such tensions do exist, they are often manipulated and amplified, in my opinion, to obscure the deeper issue of continued resource plunder and geopolitical domination.

The Western Sahel appears increasingly trapped in dynamics similar to those affecting Congo, where the M23 insurgency has reportedly benefited from external backing tied to the exploitation and trafficking of Congolese gold and minerals. In the case of West Africa, however, Pan-African leaders such as Ibrahim TraorĂ©, Assimi GoĂŻta, and Abdourahamane Tchiani are now locked in a life-and-death struggle to rescue their nations from the global ‘Empire of Theft’.

The methods of imperialism may evolve, but the objective remains fundamentally the same - control African wealth.

The events in Mali must be understood within this wider historical context of imperial domination and resource extraction.

Mali’s struggles are not simply about terrorism or ethnic division, but centuries-long systems of plunder in which gold and diamonds enrich foreign powers and local collaborators, rather than national development.

Assimi GoĂŻta and his counterparts frame their struggle as one of reclaiming national dignity and asserting sovereign control over national wealth, creating a new modus vivendi that prioritises African people over global capital interests.

These questions point towards broader international smuggling and laundering systems that connect African conflict zones to global commodity markets.

HUB FOR BLOOD DIAMONDS AND DIRTY GOLD

And within this system, Dubai has increasingly emerged, according to international watchdogs, as a major hub for the trade in illicit gold and diamonds which is then shipped to America, Europe and Asia. 

A report by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists revealed that in 2020, the US Treasury abandoned a major money-laundering case against a Dubai-based gold company that had allegedly become deeply embedded in the dirty gold trade. According to investigators, the Dubai-based company purchased precious metals from suppliers suspected of links to criminal and terrorist organisations.

Dubai has become central to the illicit gold and diamond economy. Since 2013, more than 40 per cent of the global gold trade has reportedly passed through the emirate, while diamond transactions rose from US$690 million in 2003 to more than US$38 billion in 2023.

In summary, the evidence exposed by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, and others, suggest – and exposes – the connection between terrorism, resource smuggling, and the money corridor through Dubai. 

This is precisely what the emerging Pan- African popular movements is attempting to confront - the direct and indirect theft of African wealth, while the masses remain poor, dispossessed, and marginalised.

This remains one of the great modern tragedies of Africa. We are repeatedly sold the Anancy story of the so-called “resource curse” and told that Black people are incapable of governing themselves, when the devilish machinery of imperialism continues to undermine independent development and positive political change.

Africa’s uranium, copper, petroleum, lithium, blood cobalt, diamonds, gold, and other strategic minerals continue to fuel foreign economies with the assistance of regional facilitators and comprador elites in countries such as Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Tunisia, Morocco, the UAE, and Qatar.

ECOWAS SILENCE 

The silence of ECOWAS raises troubling questions about the role of African political elites who permit continued extraction and dependency, while millions of African citizens remain trapped in poverty. 

ECOWAS has remained one of the biggest stumbling blocks to African progress. Their corrupt governments are propped up by America and France, who use their territory to destabilise Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso. 

The story of Mali is not simply one of terrorism and conflict. It is also a story of resistance, resource control, political awakening, and the enduring fight for dignity and self-determination. 

Despite the continued scurrilous activities attributed to America, France, and the UAE, the growing Pan-African movement is showing true grit, resisting and beating back the dark forces of the Empire of Theft!

That is the bitta truth.

Norris R. McDonald is an author, economic journalist, political analyst, and respiratory therapist. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com and miaminorris@yahoo.com.

Mali's Army Carries Out Overnight Strikes on Rebel-held City of Kidal

Mali’s army reportedly carried out several strikes overnight Wednesday to Thursday on the town of Kidal in the desert region in the north of the country.

It has been under the control of Tuareg rebels and their allies from the JNIM jihadist group since their large-scale coordinated attacks across the country in late April.

Their rare alliance enabled a rapid campaign that saw several strategic military bases overrun across northern Mali.

Residents have told an AFP journalist they heard at least four explosions in Kidal on Wednesday night which caused material damage.

One strike reportedly hit a house near a former market, destroying it, while another struck the governor’s compound.

A Malian army officer says the armed forces are targeting specific objectives and warned the strikes will be intensifying in the coming days.

Witnesses say Kidal was unusually calm on Thursday morning with very little traffic on the roads.

The strategic town served as an unofficial headquarters of the Tuareg Azawad Liberation Front coalition for more than a decade

It was captured by Mali's army in late 2023 with the help of Russian mercenaries.

First Doha Flight Arrives in Khartoum

14 May 2026

Badr Airlines aircraft at Khartoum airport

May 13, 2026 (KHARTOUM) – The first Badr Airlines flight from Doha arrived at Khartoum International Airport on Wednesday, marking the resumption of service after a three-year hiatus caused by the war.

The arrival comes as national carrier Sudan Airways announced it will restart direct flights between Cairo and Khartoum beginning this Saturday.

The reopening follows a drone attack on the airport last week that briefly suspended operations. The Sudanese government accused Ethiopia of providing launch sites for Rapid Support Forces drones targeting the airport and other locations, a claim Addis Ababa has denied.

Wednesday’s flight from the Qatari capital carried 179 passengers. Sources told Sudan Tribune that a flight carrying pilgrims from Khartoum State also departed for Saudi Arabia the same day.

Sudan Airways will operate the Cairo-Khartoum route once a week. Mustafa Abu Suleiman Travel, Tourism, and Hunting Group reported high demand for the new service, which many travelers see as a vital alternative to the long detour through Port Sudan International Airport.

Booking trends show that Sudan Airways has quickly attracted passengers by offering fares roughly 70% lower than competitors, along with flexible baggage allowances. Three of the five scheduled flights for this month are already fully booked.

Observers noted that these promotional offers could revitalize air travel between Sudan and Egypt and help restore confidence in the national carrier. Passengers are now awaiting the announcement of further direct routes to Khartoum, particularly from Jeddah and Riyadh.

The Civil Aviation Authority issued a Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) on Friday officially reopening Sudanese airspace to international traffic at Khartoum International Airport, citing efforts to restore full operational capacity and international safety standards.

Sudanese Army Intensifies Drone Strikes on RSF Strongholds in Nyala

14 May 2026

A member of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) stands near the debris of a drone that the paramilitary group said it shot down in Nyala, May 14, 2026.

May 14, 2026 (NYALA) – The Sudanese army intensified its aerial operations in Nyala on Thursday, launching drone strikes for the third consecutive day against various targets in the capital of South Darfur.

This aerial escalation marks the largest of its kind since the conflict between the army and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) began in April 2023.

The RSF and its allies have turned Nyala into the capital of a parallel government led by Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, with Mohamed Hassan al-Taishi serving as prime minister. The city has also become a hub for military supplies arriving from Chad, Libya, and Bosaso, Somalia, following the reopening of the airport.

A military source told Sudan Tribune that the army aims to paralyze the RSF’s defensive and offensive capabilities through these intensive strikes.

The source said the bombing targeted Nyala International Airport, destroying drone runways at the “UNAMID” site and new fortifications built to protect the RSF’s drone fleet. The attacks also hit fuel depots, ammunition and missile stores, air defence systems, and the residences of RSF commanders.

Witnesses and local sources reported that drones targeted several areas of the city, including the airport, the industrial zone, the Al-Riyadh and Dumaya neighbourhoods, and the University of Nyala complex.

Sources noted four unprecedented explosions on Thursday morning, followed by similar strikes in the evening, causing widespread panic among residents.

In response, RSF leadership restricted access to Starlink satellite internet for security reasons and closed several internet cafes. The RSF intelligence wing also launched a wave of arrests targeting civilians and traders in Nyala’s main market and the El Geneina bus station market.

Meanwhile, pro-RSF platforms claimed their air defences shot down a Bayraktar Akinci drone over the city. The platforms shared videos showing burnt wreckage, though Sudan Tribune could not independently verify the drone’s identity.

Earlier in May, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo arrived in Nyala to meet with his allies in the “Ta’asis” coalition and with military leaders from RSF-controlled states.

Sudan Warns African Union Mission Against Finalizing Report Without Wider Testimony

14 May 2026

Sudanese delegation participating at the 87th Ordinary Session of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights in Banjul on May 12, 2026

May 13, 2026 (BANJUL) – Sudanese officials warned the African Union’s fact-finding mission on Wednesday against publishing any final report before interviewing all affected parties.

Since its inception, the mission has released one report concluding that the Sudanese army, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), and their allies committed widespread abuses. That report recommended deploying a force to protect civilians, establishing an international judicial mechanism, and expanding the Darfur arms embargo to cover all of Sudan.

The Sudanese delegation attending the 78th session of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights met with the head of the fact-finding mission and the AU commissioner for Sudan, Hatem al-Saim.

Sudan’s Ambassador to Addis Ababa and head of the delegation, Zain Ibrahim, said in a statement that he warned during the meeting “against publishing any final report before completing investigations with all those affected.”

He urged the mission to meet with Sudan’s national human rights mechanism and to document victims of RSF violations within the country.

The delegation reiterated Sudan’s reservations regarding the joint statement with the UN fact-finding mission, arguing that existing international and national mechanisms, such as the country office for human rights and the UN Human Rights Council’s designated expert, are sufficient.

On Tuesday, the AU and UN missions issued the “Banjul Declaration” during the 87th African Commission session held in the Gambian capital.

Sudan has consistently refused to cooperate with the UN fact-finding mission established in October 2023 and has denied its members entry to the country.

The Sudanese delegation briefed Hatem al-Saim on recent developments, including the relocation of state institutions to Khartoum and the voluntary return of refugees and displaced persons. The delegation also highlighted a peace initiative presented by the Prime Minister to the UN Security Council.

According to the statement, al-Saim briefed the delegation on the mission’s visit to refugee camps in eastern Chad, where they witnessed the scale of violations committed by the RSF in Darfur. He noted that virtual interviews were also conducted with victims in other regions.

The Banjul Declaration called for an end to attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, immediate steps toward a cessation of hostilities, and a sustainable ceasefire supported by monitoring and trust-building measures.

It further called for investigations into war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by both the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces and recommended the creation of an African-led accountability mechanism to prosecute perpetrators.

Sudan Central Bank Eases Gold Export Rules to Boost Forex Inflows

14 May 2026

May 14, 2026 (KHARTOUM) – Sudan’s central bank has eased gold export regulations and revised import procedures, introducing a daily pricing mechanism that applies a $10 per ounce discount to the global 24-karat gold rate.

The central bank said the move aims to encourage gold exports through official channels to increase foreign currency inflows and stabilize the Sudanese pound’s exchange rate.

Under Circular No. 13/2026, the bank will calculate the daily price by applying the discount to the international exchange rate and converting it to a price per gram in U.S. dollars.

Commercial banks and relevant authorities must adhere to prices announced through the XAR electronic system. The central bank stated that export shipments would not be cleared if their value falls below the estimated incentive price.

In a separate directive, Circular No. 12/2026, the central bank removed previous restrictions on the use of export earnings. Exporters are now permitted to use proceeds from gold and other commodities to fund the import of any goods authorized by the Ministry of Trade.

The regulations established an “intermediate import account” to manage these operations. Funds must be utilized within 21 days, after which the central bank will purchase any remaining balance.

Motasim Mohamed Saleh, secretary-general of the Gold Exporters Chamber, told Sudan Tribune the amendments are a positive step toward reducing currency speculation.

Saleh said the measures would improve the flow of revenues but urged the government to tighten oversight on non-essential imports to ensure the policy’s success.

While welcoming the changes, Saleh noted that exporters still face logistical hurdles and called for the reinstatement of the “passenger-accompanied” transport system to lower costs.

A previous directive, Circular No. 11/2026, allows exporters to use gold proceeds for their own imports or sell them to commercial banks and the central bank. It also set the minimum export contract at one kilogram.

Over 40% of Sudan’s Population Face High Levels of Acute Food Insecurity, Monitoring Group Warns

Customers buy vegetables at a market in Omdurman, on the outskirts of Khartoum, Sudan, Sunday, April 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

10:55 AM EDT, May 14, 2026

CAIRO (AP) — More than 40% of the population in war-torn Sudan are facing high levels of acute food insecurity through May as the conflict enters its fourth year, a global hunger monitoring group said Thursday.

The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, said in a new assessment that of the nearly 19.5 million people facing this level of food insecurity, 135,000 people were in Phase 5, which is characterized by “extreme food gaps, starvation, very high levels of malnutrition, and death due to disease or acute malnutrition.”

“Conditions are expected to deteriorate further in the upcoming June–September lean season,” the IPC assessment statement read. It warned that an estimated 825,000 children under 5 years old are expected to suffer from severe acute malnutrition in 2026 amid limited access to medical treatment, marking a 7% increase compared to last year and a 25% increase compared to prewar levels.

More than 98,500 children received treatment for severe acute malnutrition between January and March, according to the IPC.

The war in Sudan broke out in April 2023 after long-simmering tensions between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces erupted into a full-scale armed conflict. At least 59,000 people have been killed, some 13 million displaced, and many parts of the country have been pushed into famine. More than 30 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance.

The IPC said Thursday that it found that no area is in famine, but warned that 14 areas in the provinces of North Darfur, South Darfur, and South Kordofan are at risk of famine if conflict intensifies, food access worsens, healthcare and sanitation decline, and displacement increases.

Last year, famine was confirmed in el-Fasher, a major city in the western Darfur region, and in the town of Kadugli, in South Kordofan.

Farmers in Sudan are bracing for an expensive planting season as costs of fertilizers, gasoline to power farm equipment and diesel for irrigation pumps increase due to the conflict in the Middle East.

The Gulf region, where hundreds of commercial ships have been stranded for weeks because of Iran’s grip on the Strait of Hormuz, provides over half of Sudan’s fertilizer that’s imported by sea. Fuel prices have shot up by around 30%.

Two Weeks of Clashes in a Southern Sudan Region Kill Dozens, a Local Medical Group Says

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

By FATMA KHALED

5:46 PM EDT, May 13, 2026

CAIRO (AP) — Two weeks of intense clashes in southern Sudan have killed over 61 people, including nine children, a local medical group said Wednesday, fighting that is part of the larger war that has gripped the African country since 2023.

According to the Sudan Doctors Network, which monitors casualty tolls in the conflict, the fighting erupted earlier this month between forces linked to the rebel group Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North and the Otoro tribe in the town of Kauda, in South Kordofan.

Rebel leader Abdel Aziz al-Hilu, who commands the SPLM-N, has aligned his fighters with the Sudanese paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, a group that is fighting the Sudanese military.

Sudan’s war, now in its fourth year, has left the military in control over the north, east and central regions, including Sudan’s Red Sea ports and its oil refineries and pipelines. The paramilitary RSF and its allies control the western Darfur region and areas in the Kordofan region along the border with South Sudan — both regions rich in oil fields and gold mines.

Al-Hilu’s group, the SPLM-N, has been active in South Kodrofan and has joined a local government set up by the paramilitary RSF.

The SPLM-N is a breakaway faction of the SPLM, the ruling party of neighboring South Sudan. The Otoro tribe is a minority group in the Nuba Mountains of South Kordofan.

The war in Sudan broke out in April 2023 after long-simmering tensions between the army and RSF erupted into a full-out war. The conflict has killed at least 59,000 people, displaced some 13 million, and pushed many parts of the country into famine. More than 30 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance.

The statement from the doctors group said that according to testimonies its team in South Kordofan gathered from survivors, five women and nine children were among those killed over the past two weeks.

Mohamed Elsheikh, the group’s spokesperson, told The Associated Press that poor communication has made it difficult to verify the full toll, which is likely higher as the clashes continue.

The doctors group also said that SPLM-N fighters burned homes and shops and looted properties. Survivors reportedly told the group that civilians were “indiscriminately targeted.”

The group also warned that areas around Kauda have seen “systematic burning” and attacks on civilians, with no safe corridors for evacuating the wounded or delivering aid.

The SPLM-N did not immediately respond to request for comments.

In Dilling, another town in South Kordofan, artillery shelling by the RSF on Tuesday killed seven people and wounded 17, according to a local hospital. Umm Bakhita Hospital director Omran Teia in Dilling told the AP that civilians were targeted by the paramilitary and SPLM-N.

Sudan’s both warring sides have been accused by the United Nations and rights groups of committing atrocities, including ethnic cleansing, extrajudicial killings and sexual violence against civilians. Aid groups say the true toll could be much higher as access to areas of fighting across the vast country remains limited.

___

Associated Press writer Yassir Abdalla in Shendi, Sudan, contributed to this report.

A Surge in Violence Followed Trump’s Cuts to USAID Programs in Africa, a Study Finds

By WILSON MCMAKIN

2:11 PM EDT, May 14, 2026

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision last year to abruptly dissolve the U.S. Agency for International Development — once a leading global aid donor — has been followed by a significant increase in violence in several African countries that the agency had supported, according to a study published on Thursday.

While the authors did not blame the USAID cuts for the increase in violence, they said the findings demonstrate that “large-scale, sudden aid cuts can destabilize fragile settings.” They, however, added that this is not evidence that more aid reduces conflict, instead it only shows “the effect of a sudden and unexpected disruption.”

For many years, USAID had provided crucial support to African countries wrecked by conflict and violence. By eliminating more than 90% of foreign aid contracts, the Trump administration effectively cut some $60 billion in funding.

The study by researchers from several universities in Europe and the United States said the abrupt withdrawal of USAID resources also interrupted contracts, staffing and aid procurement.

“The abrupt withdrawal of USAID led to a significant and sustained increase in conflict across Africa’s most USAID-dependent regions,” said the study, published in the Science journal.

The researchers said they examined whether the abrupt shutdown of USAID was followed by an increase in violence in regions of Africa that had historically received the most support and found that there was a correlation.

Africa is facing a threat from jihadis more than any other region in the world, conflict experts say. The Armed Conflict Location & Event Data, or ACLED, said Wednesday in a new report that jihadis in the region have been more involved in violence across the board and have been increasingly targeting civilians in the last four years.

USAID had long been the key funding partner for many African countries, helping to provide funding that helped governments and aid groups respond to multiple crises across different sectors.

In Nigeria for example, USAID support had helped victims of the militant Boko Haram group, which emerged in 2002. In Ethiopia’s fragile Tigray region, officials relied heavily on U.S. funds as full-scale recovery efforts were yet to start after the war there killed hundreds of thousands.

And in northern Ivory Coast, a front line of the global fight against extremism, USAID had made significant financial commitments to counter the spread of al-Qaida and the Islamic State group.

The findings from the study underscore the lasting impact of funding cuts, said Nathaniel Raymond, executive director of the Humanitarian Research Lab at the Yale School of Public Health, who was not among the authors of the study.

“The lasting problem with the shuttering of USAID is likely going to be that for much of its conflict prevention work, even if you put back all the money ... the experience is gone,” Raymond said.

Also, some USAID programs may have helped prevent spillover from conflict zones, said Ladd Serwat, senior Africa analyst at ACLED.

“We now see increasing insurgency and spillover, so some of those programs may have supported these communities from insurgent threats, and now they are no longer active,” said Serwat.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Somalia is in a Deadly Drought Again. Most Humanitarian Aid Isn’t There This Time

By JACK DENTON and OMAR FARUK

10:28 AM EDT, May 14, 2026

PUNTLAND, Somalia (AP) — Most of Abdi Ahmed Farah’s hundreds of goats have died. It has not rained steadily in this part of Somalia for three years, something the 70-year-old never thought possible.

He is in debt from buying water. The reservoir outside his tent is nearly empty. His family is down to one meal a day: rice with sugar and oil. The youngest of his 22 children was born three weeks ago and his wife produces only occasional drops of breast milk.

“I have considered abandoning my family because I cannot provide for them,” said Farah, sitting in front of dwindling food supplies, as if on guard.

Yet another drought is affecting millions of people across Somalia, one of the world’s most vulnerable countries to climate shocks. Some rivers are dry. Crops have withered. Experts say the drought could be among the worst in Somali history.

The crisis is compounded by aid cuts, most dramatically by the Trump administration, and rising prices from the Iran war. Somalia buys most of its fuel from the Middle East, and 70% of its food is imported.

Production of staple crops of maize and sorghum in the October-December rainy season was the lowest on record in Somalia, according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization.

Food security experts warn that nearly a half-million children might face severe acute malnutrition, the harshest kind. That would be higher than the number of children requiring treatment for it during droughts in 2011 and 2022, according to UNICEF.

‘It’s a repeated climate shock’

“2026 is the worst year on record for Somalia in terms of drought,” said Hameed Nuru, the U.N. World Food Program director for Somalia. “Children have started dying.”

The Somali government and the United Nations estimated in February that 6.5 million people face crisis levels of hunger, representing a third of the country’s population and a 25% increase since January.

The number of Somalis currently facing food insecurity stands at 6 million, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification report released on Thursday. Although the figure is lower than the 6.5 million reported in February, it is higher than the projected 5.5 million indicated in the February report.

Aid agencies are trying to maximize resources and the Somali diaspora is sending money to help, but humanitarian workers warn it is not enough.

“This drought is not just another cycle of dry season. It’s a repeated climate shock with shrinking humanitarian support,” said Mohamed Assair, a manager with Save the Children in Puntland, a semi-autonomous region.

People drank dirty rainwater and got sick

Farah once had 680 goats, but a lack of food and water as well as diseases exacerbated by drought have claimed all but 110 of them, barely clinging to life.

“There is no market for my goats because they are so thin. Previously we would trade them for rice, but now we can’t,” he said. Farah’s family has been at a site outside Usgure village for 10 days. Almost a dozen goat carcasses lie nearby.

In Usgure, home to 700 families, community leader Abshir Hirsi Ali said the local economy has collapsed because they rely on pastoralists like Farah. Shops have closed and food rations have run low.

A recent, brief shower brought puddles of dirty rainwater. “Some families were so desperate they drank it … now there is a high number of people with fever,” Ali said.

Save the Children occasionally brings free water to Usgure, but private water trucks have quadrupled their prices and the cost of a 50-kilogram (110-pound) bag of flour has increased by a third, to $40.

“I’m not only afraid for my family but the future of the whole village,” said Muhubo Tahir Omar, a 47-year-old mother of 11 children.

Omar, like other parents, had sold her goats to pay for school fees, “but when we didn’t pay, the teachers left.” Her last goat is now sick.

‘Conflict made our situation even worse’

Decades of conflict in Somalia have displaced millions of people. The drought has displaced another 200,000 this year, the U.N estimates.

Some families flee across harsh landscapes with limited supplies.

“People are on the move … and when people move, people die,” said Kevin Mackey, the Somalia director for humanitarian group World Vision. He recently met people who had walked for nine days to get aid in Dollow in the south.

Around 80 families live in a displacement camp outside Shahda village in Puntland.

Shukri, a 20-year-old mother of four, usually can eke out one meal a day from handouts. Now there is nothing to eat and limited access to clean water.

“The children got diarrhea (from dirty water) and malnourishment worsened,” said Shukri, who gave only her first name. “I know a few people who have died.”

Many people head to Mogadishu, the capital, where food also remains scarce.

Fadumo, a 45-year-old mother of seven, moved there from Lower Shabelle, where livelihoods were already threatened by al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab militants.

“The water sources we depended on for farming, including the river, dried up,” Fadumo said. “Conflict made our situation even worse, forcing us to flee.”

‘The outlook is deeply concerning’

Drought ravaged Somalia in 2022 and an estimated 36,000 people died, according to the U.N. Now the kind of aid that was rushed to respond to such crises is shrinking.

“Unless there is a sudden and substantial response from donors, the outlook is deeply concerning. A drought of similar severity in 2022 received a response five times greater than what we are seeing,” said Antoine Grand, head of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Somalia.

Aid funding to Somalia dropped to $531 million in 2025 in large part because of aid cuts by the United States, which had been Somalia’s top donor. In 2022, aid funding was nearly five times as much at $2.38 billion.

WFP said it intended to help 2 million people with food aid this year but has reached only 300,000 because of funding gaps.

A center at the hospital in Qardho, Puntland, treats children with severe acute malnutrition. But therapeutic milk is now rarely in stock, and nurses resort to homemade alternatives such as cow’s milk, said director Shamis Abdirahman.

The center receives around 15 children a month, but they expect more as displaced people arrive.

One 4-year-old, Farhia, weighs a scant 7.5 kilograms (16.5 pounds). Her eyes are sunken and her bones are prominent under her skin.

Her family fled to Qardho when all of their goats died, said her mother, Najma.

“I don’t know what to hope for, or see how we can get back to what we had,” she said.

___

Faruk reported from Mogadishu, Somalia.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Southern States Move Toward Massive Disenfranchisement of African Americans

Supreme Court decision in Louisiana v. Callais, et.al eviscerates the already weakened Voting Rights Act of 1965

By Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday May 13, 2026

Politico-Legal Analysis

On May 7, just hours after the Republican-dominated Tennessee State Assembly passed legislation which split Memphis into three separate congressional districts, the city which has a large majority of African Americans could be left with no relevant representation.

Protests in Nashville led by African American State Assembly members have generated even more attacks on opponents of the Louisiana v. Callais decision and the subsequent redrawing of the Memphis congressional map. 

The Supreme Court voted along partisan lines with the 6 conservative justices ensuring that the Voting Rights Act passed by Congress in 1965 and signed into law by then President Lyndon Baines Johnson would be effectively eliminated. This legislation which grew directly out of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s, opened the way for the first African American Congressional representation since the defeat of Reconstruction during the 1870s. 

Efforts under the previous administration of President Joe Biden to pass renewed voting rights legislation named in honor of the late Congressman and Civil Rights activist John Lewis failed due to lack of votes in a Democratic-dominated House of Representatives and Senate in 2021. The John Lewis Voting Rights bill was scraped along with other legislation such as the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, represented promises made during the mass demonstrations and rebellions which occurred during 2020 leading up to the presidential and congressional elections of that year.

In addition, a $3.5 trillion social spending bill did not succeed either, which was purportedly aimed at reducing poverty among children. All of these failures since 2021, have worsened the social conditions among African Americans and other oppressed people.  

This recent Supreme Court decision was not surprising considering the polls which indicate extremely low approval ratings for current President Donald Trump. His tariffs policies have prompted inflationary pressures while the unprovoked war on Iran has caused political and economic turmoil in the United States and internationally. 

One Tennessee state legislator said during the session which disenfranchised African Americans in the state that the purpose of the redistricting bill was to ensure that right-wing Republicans maintain control of the House of Representatives. If the Democrats retake the House, the stage could be set for considerable acrimony within Congress over the final two years of the Trump second non-consecutive term. 

Moreover, the unprovoked war against Iran has drawn even more negative reviews of the Trump administration. The State of Israel and the U.S. launched a bombing campaign against the Islamic Republic of Iran on February 28 hoping for the collapse of the government in Tehran which has been in existence since early 1979. 

Trump’s mantra of “making America great again” has alienated a considerable number of his right-wing base with the launching of the war on Iran. Nonetheless, it remains to be seen whether or not the failure of the U.S. in the Iran war and the concomitant outcomes including the rise in fuel, food and other consumer goods prices will turn Republicans away from Trump and his allies. The rise in inflation has impacted small and medium-sized business enterprises prompting lay-offs across the country. 

Additional Attacks on Tennessee Voters

On the same day as the Tennessee Assembly voted to redraw the Memphis Congressional District, demonstrations were held in Nashville against this injustice. The African American representatives and their allies vowed to fight against the disenfranchisement of the people of Memphis and Shelby County.

The Tennessee State Chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) immediately filed a lawsuit to overturn the redistricting legislation. In the claim filed by the NAACP in Tennessee it accuses Republican Governor Bill Lee of not informing the Assembly of the purpose of the special session which carried out the redistricting scheme.

In an article published in Tennessee Outlook, it notes:

“State attorneys are asking the court to deny the NAACP Tennessee chapter’s request to stop a redrawn congressional map from going into effect before the 2026 election. NAACP Tennessee President Gloria Sweet-Love and the NAACP Tennessee State Conference filed an emergency petition in Davidson County Chancery Court on May 7, hours after Gov. Bill Lee signed into law the new U.S. House district map — which carved up the state’s only majority-Black, majority-Democrat district in Memphis…. The NAACP and Sweet-Love contend that ‘the Governor didn’t use just the right magic words to describe the exact election laws he hoped to change when he convened the Special Session, and so any legislation resulting from the special session is ‘void,’ Skrmetti’s filing read. ‘Plaintiffs take an all too jaundiced view of the Tennessee Constitution and the Governor’s Proclamation that began the Special Session.’ The lawsuit also challenged a provision that suspends residency requirements for candidates in the newly drawn districts, similarly, stating that this was not included in Lee’s proclamation prior to the special session.

The state’s response said the lawsuit fails to identify ‘imminent harm.’” (https://tennesseelookout.com/2026/05/11/state-responds-to-tennessee-naacp-lawsuit-challenging-redistricted-map/)

Due to protests by African Americans and Democrats in the State House in Nashville, they have been removed from committee seats in the legislature. Consequently, the African American population of Tennessee is being silenced by the Republican majority.

The State of Tennessee’s argument that no damage has been done is outrageous. Just 61 years after the passage of the Voting Rights Act, the federal government under the Trump administration has declared war on the gains which were made during the post-World War II period for African Americans and women in general. 

The freedom of African people in the U.S. took a series of rebellions and a civil war to bring into existence. The 13th and 14th Amendments to the Constitution were passed by the Congress in 1865 and 1868 respectively. The 13th Amendment purportedly ended African enslavement, and the 14th granted due process rights to the millions of whom had languished in involuntary servitude for nearly 250 years. 

In 1870, the 15th Amendment was passed which ostensibly granted the right to vote for African American men. It would take another half-century in 1920 (19th Amendment) for white women to gain the right to vote on a national level. 

However, even as late as the early and mid-1960s, the majority of African Americans still living in the southern U.S., were denied the right to vote. Not only were they denied the right to vote, African Americans, in many instances, could not walk into a restaurant and order a cup of coffee or a meal. African Americans were excluded from hotels and educational institutions based upon the color of their skin. 

It would take a mass Civil Rights Movement encompassing demonstrations, civil disobedience and legal challenges to initiate the changes which came into being during the mid-1960s. The MAGA Republicans who argue that Civil Rights legislation is no longer needed and are tantamount to racial preferences granted to the nationally oppressed, the reality is that the gap between African American and white wealth is still widening. 

Racist violence is still very much the norm in the U.S. African Americans and Latin Americans remain subjected to disproportionate violence from law-enforcement agencies in both the South and the North. The criminal justice system continues to profile, target and prosecute African Americans and Latin Americans to the extent that they constitute together the majority of those incarcerated in jails and prisons across the country. 

If the current trajectory is not reversed, it will be inevitable that further divisions and struggles on a national and class level will escalate. African Americans will be compelled to develop new tactics to meet the current challenges from the far right to place them back into a subservient social status in the U.S.

Other States Seeking to Repeat the Actions of the Tennessee State Assembly

The Supreme Court decision striking down key elements of the Voting Rights Act originated in the state of Louisiana where 30% of the population are African Americans. Already based upon the Supreme Court decision, the scheduled primary for May has been postponed until July in order to take into consideration the new ruling.

At present Congressman Cleo Fields and Troy Carter are the only African Americans representing Louisiana in Congress. Under the current ruling, they could very easily loose his seat leaving African Americans with no representation. There have been only four African Americans from Louisiana in the U.S. Congress since the Reconstruction era.

In Alabama, where a previous court rulings had mandated the creation of another majority African American district, only two are present in the current Congress where under the new ruling could be left without representation. Alabama represented the key state where the Selma Campaign of the mid-1960s created the political atmosphere which prompted the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

South Carolina could also be impacted where Congressman James Clyburn is the only African American representing this conservative southern state. In Virginia, a state supreme court decision has struck down a plan which could have created four additional districts which would benefit Democratic politicians.

Overall, in 2026, the largest number of African Americans ever are serving in the U.S. House and Senate. There are 62 in the House and 5 in the Senate. Consequently, the Supreme Court decision in Louisiana v. Callais is designed to severely reduce these numbers.

These developments require militant action on the part of African Americans and their allies not only in the South but across the entire country. The shifting demographic character of the U.S. and the sharpening class divisions is causing panic on the part of many whites. 

Within another generation, people of color communities could very well constitute a combined majority-minority country. The rise in poverty will undoubtedly intensify the struggle to organize labor and oppressed people into a formidable force aimed at ending racism and capitalist exploitation. 

Nigerian Military Airstrike Kills 100 Civilians at a Market, Rights Group Claims

By DYEPKAZAH SHIBAYAN and TUNDE OMOLEHIN

1:07 PM EDT, May 12, 2026

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — Nigeria ‘s military Tuesday denied a rights group’s claim that an airstrike killed 100 civilians in a market over the weekend, as attention turned again to a long-running fight against armed groups in the country’s volatile north.

Amnesty International in a statement Monday said a military airstrike on Sunday hit a market in Tumfa in Zamfara state. A Red Cross official in the state, Ibrahim Bello Garba, confirmed the strike to The Associated Press and said “multiple civilians” were killed.

“In one village alone, 80 people were buried and there is no evidence that any of those people killed is a bandit. They are all civilians. The majority of them are young girls and small boys,” Amnesty International Nigeria director Isa Sanusi told the AP.

Nigeria’s military confirmed an airstrike to the AP but said “no verifiable evidence of civilian casualties as being suggested in the media has been established.”

“Civilians are not the target, and everything is being done to avoid civilian casualties,” said a spokesperson, Maj. Gen. Michael Onoja, who said military operations continued in the area.

The Amnesty allegation is the latest related to an accidental military airstrike hitting civilians in the West African nation that faces threats from militant groups including Boko Haram.

Last month, an accidental strike by Nigeria’s air force killed 100 people.

Analysts blame a lack of coordination between the air force and personnel on the ground for such strikes, which have killed hundreds of civilians. Nigerian officials have maintained that targets are members of armed groups.

Armed groups often mix with locals in areas where they operate, complicating efforts to target them.

___

Omolehin reported from Sokoto, Nigeria.

Macron Faces Backlash After Interrupting Africa Summit Panel in Kenya

French President Emmanuel Macron gave a telling off to a noisy audience during a presentation at the University of Nairobi. The event was part of the “Africa Forward: Inspire and Connect” business forum where he was also joined by his Kenyan counterpart, William Ruto.

By MARK BANCHEREAU

1:00 AM EDT, May 13, 2026

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron is facing backlash after he interrupted a panel at the Africa Forward Summit in Kenya to demand silence from the audience.

Macron stormed the stage to rebuke audience members for what he called a “total lack of respect,” accusing them of disrupting speakers during a presentation by artists and young entrepreneurs. He had earlier described himself as a “Pan-Africanist” during a news conference.

The summit is meant to showcase France’s new policy for the continent — a shift from a former colonial power seen as dominating to what Paris describes as a partnership of equals. On Tuesday, Macron announced a $27 billion investment into various sectors in Africa, including energy, artificial intelligence and agriculture.

Videos of Macron’s heated intervention on Monday quickly spread across social media, drawing a mix of mockery, praise and criticism.

Appearing visibly frustrated by the noise in the room, Macron abruptly walked onto the stage and asked the speaker to hand him the microphone, saying he would “restore order.”

Addressing the audience in English, he criticized attendees for talking over the speakers and creating disruptions during the session.

Some audience members applauded the intervention, but Macron also drew criticism over his response.

“Just imagine what would happen if an African leader did the same thing in America or Europe,” said Thierno Mbaye, a history student at a university in Senegal’s capital, Dakar.

“He acted like a schoolteacher scolding children,” Mbaye told The Associated Press.

The intervention also drew criticism in France.

“It’s stronger than him: as soon as he sets foot on the African continent, he can’t help but behave like a colonizer,” Danièle Obono, a lawmaker for the hard-left party France Unbowed, said in a post on X.

Diplomatic and military setbacks in West Africa

The Africa Forward Summit, which is set to close on Tuesday with a declaration that is expected to be signed by all 30 heads of state, comes amid a fallout between France and its former colonies, mostly in West Africa.

France has long maintained a colonial policy of economic, political and military sway dubbed Françafrique, which included keeping thousands of troops in the region it controlled.

After years of criticism from leaders and opposition parties in many West African countries over what they described as a demeaning and heavy-handed approach, France has withdrawn most of its troops from the region. It completed the withdrawal of troops from Senegal in July.

Macron had already faced a backlash ahead of the summit for claiming Sunday at news conference alongside Kenyan President William Ruto that “we are the true Pan-Africanists.”

“We believe that Africa is a continent, and that this continent has an enormous amount to build,” Macron said.

Pan-Africanism refers to an ideology seeking the unity of Africans and the elimination of colonialism. Given France’s colonial history across the continent, the remark went viral on social media and drew swift backlash.

“Pan Africanism is not a brand, Mr. Macron, neither is it a diplomatic posture,” Farida Nabourema, a Togolese human rights activist, said in an open letter on Monday.

“It is a political philosophy that said no to everything France spent three centuries saying yes to: slavery, colonialism and neocolonialism,” she added.

Beverly Ochieng, a senior analyst at geopolitical risk consultancy Control Risks, said Macron is trying to distance France from its diplomatic and military setbacks in West Africa by turning to the east of the continent, signaling that its strategic priorities now follow where it finds goodwill.

She said Macron’s remarks were raising questions about whether France’s renewed engagement with Africa represented a genuine equal partnership or merely convenient rhetoric.

The French presidency and Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Paris will be respectful of each African country’s independence, Macron said on Tuesday, adding that “sovereignty and autonomy is shared, and your success is our success.”

‘Inauthentic or politically manipulated’

Alioune Tine, founder of the Afrikajom Center think tank, said Macron’s remark might also be a subtle jab at Russia, which has replaced France as the main security partner in some West African countries.

“When Macron describes himself as the ‘true’ pan-Africanist, it is also a subtle response to the pro-Russian pan-Africanist voices online, which French officials tend to view as inauthentic or politically manipulated,” Tine said.

He said relations between Western powers and African states are inherently paternalistic and France is no exception, but that Macron has shifted policy away from the colonial legacy through a more informal diplomatic style aimed at rebuilding trust.

According to an Ipsos survey conducted on behalf of the French Foreign Ministry in nine African countries ahead of the summit, 74% of respondents said they have a positive image of France. Support was highest in English-speaking countries and among respondents under 35.

Macron, who is the first French president born after the colonial era, had pledged after his first election in 2017 that he would reset French relations with Africa.

Remains of 2nd US Soldier Who Went Missing During Military Exercises in Morocco Have Been Recovered

By AKRAM OUBACHIR

6:51 PM EDT, May 13, 2026

CASABLANCA, Morocco (AP) — The remains of the second U.S. Army soldier who went missing during military exercises in Morocco have been recovered, the Army said Wednesday, ending a multinational search operation that deployed air, naval and artificial intelligence assets.

The soldier was identified as Spc. Mariyah Symone Collington of Taveres, Fla., the U.S. military Europe and Africa said in a statement. She was 19 years old.

“Royal Moroccan Armed Forces transported the Soldier’s remains by a Moroccan helicopter to the morgue of Moulay El Hassan Military Hospital in Guelmim, Morocco,” the statement said.

Collington served as an air and missile defense crewmember and was assigned to Charlie Battery, 5th Battalion, 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, 10th Army Air and Missile Defense Command, U.S. Army Europe and Africa said.

Collington entered the Regular Army’s Delayed Entry Program in 2023 before beginning active-duty service in 2024. She completed Basic Combat Training and Advanced Individual Training at Fort Sill in Oklahoma, as a 14P air and missile defense crewmember. She reported to Charlie Battery, 5th Battalion, 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, in Ansbach, Germany, in February 2025 and was promoted to specialist on May 1, 2026.

Her awards and decorations include the Army Service Ribbon.

The announcement came days after the military said the remains of another soldier, 1st Lt. Kendrick Lamont Key Jr., a 14A Air Defense Artillery officer, had been recovered. The two soldiers fell off a cliff during an off-duty recreational hike in Morocco. Their remains are en route to the United States.

A spokesperson for U.S. Army Southern European Task Force, Africa told The Associated Press that the circumstances surrounding the incident remain under investigation.

The two soldiers were reported missing May 2 after participating in African Lion, an annual multinational military exercise held in Morocco. Their disappearance triggered a search operation involving more than 1,000 U.S. and Moroccan military and civilian personnel, the SETAF-AF spokesperson added.

Assets deployed during the operation included a U.S. Navy P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft, unmanned aerial systems, thermal and ISR sensors, an unmanned underwater vehicle, side-scan sonar, a Moroccan multibeam echosounder and U.S. Coast Guard drift modeling capabilities, according to the spokesperson.

African Lion 26, is a U.S.-led exercise launched in April across four countries – Morocco, Tunisia, Ghana and Senegal – with more than 7,000 personnel from over 30 nations.

In 2012, two U.S. Marines were killed and two others injured during a helicopter crash in Morocco’s southern city of Agadir while taking part in the exercises