Thursday, June 25, 2026

The Death Toll From Earthquakes in Venezuela Rises to 164

Acting President Delcy Rodríguez said the death toll from the June 24 earthquakes reached 164, with 971 injured, and announced an initial US$200 million reconstruction fund.

Venezuela earthquakes, Delcy Rodríguez, death toll, injured, reconstruction fund, aftershocks, La Guaira, Distrito Capital, Miranda

Telesur

June 25, 2026 Hour: 6:35 am

The acting president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, reported that the death toll from the two earthquakes that shook the South American country on Wednesday, June 24, has risen to 164, with 971 injured.

Rescue operations continued across Venezuela on Thursday after two powerful earthquakes struck the country a day earlier, leaving at least 164 people dead and 971 injured, according to Venezuelan Acting President Delcy Rodríguez, who also announced emergency recovery measures and international assistance for affected communities.

In a telephone address broadcast by Venezolana de Televisión (VTV), the acting president announced the creation of an initial US$200 million reconstruction fund, the deployment of additional rescue teams, and financial assistance for families and workers affected by the disaster.

The earthquakes, measuring 7.2 and 7.5, hit Venezuela on Wednesday, June 24, with the states of La Guaira, Distrito Capital and Miranda sustaining the most severe damage. The acting president said 101 aftershocks had occurred between the two main earthquakes.

La Guaira has been declared a natural disaster zone because of the number of collapsed buildings requiring search and rescue operations. Efforts are also focused on Greater Caracas, where 10 buildings collapsed during the earthquakes.

“We are transferring rescuers from other states of the country so that we can concentrate our efforts, first in La Guaira state and also in Greater Caracas,” the acting president said.

She also appealed to the private sector to support emergency operations by making heavy construction equipment available to remove debris and help rescuers reach people still trapped beneath collapsed structures.

“I wanted to address the country to request the support of the private sector so that yellow machinery can be rented for the rescue operations,” she said.

According to the acting president, business and commercial chambers have already begun coordinating with authorities to accelerate rescue efforts during daylight hours.

The acting president also said she had spoken with several heads of state and the United Nations Resident Coordinator in Venezuela to request specialized rescue assistance.

“I have also spoken with many heads of state and with the coordinator of the United Nations System in Venezuela, who are already sending specialized rescuers certified by the UN System. They are already on their way to our country to support these operations,” she said.

To support recovery, the acting president announced an initial US$200 million reconstruction fund using resources available through the International Monetary Fund. The financing will be used to rebuild infrastructure and hospitals, as well as construct housing for families who lost their homes.

She also instructed the vice president for the economy and the finance minister to establish an emergency fund to provide immediate assistance to victims of the disaster.

In addition, the acting president announced special credit lines through public and private banks for people whose businesses or factories were affected, along with financial assistance through the Patria System for workers who lost their jobs.

The acting president concluded by calling for a nationwide ecumenical prayer at 7:00 p.m. for people still trapped beneath collapsed buildings and urged residents whose homes remain structurally safe to remain indoors so rescue teams can continue their work.

European Nations Pledge Earthquake Aid to Venezuela

Italy will seek activation of the EU Civil Protection Mechanism as several European governments offer assistance and express solidarity with Venezuela following the earthquakes.

Venezuela earthquakes, European Union Civil Protection Mechanism, Italy, Spain, France, Belgium, Portugal, humanitarian assistance, emergency response

European governments announced humanitarian assistance and messages of solidarity with Venezuela after the two powerful earthquakes. Photo: EFE

June 25, 2026 Hour: 5:22 am

Italy will seek activation of the EU Civil Protection Mechanism as several European governments offer support following the earthquakes.

Several European governments have offered assistance to Venezuela after two powerful earthquakes measuring 7.2 and 7.5 struck parts of the country on Wednesday. Italy announced it will request the activation of the European Union Civil Protection Mechanism to coordinate and finance emergency assistance, while Spain, Portugal, France and Belgium also expressed solidarity and pledged support.

Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said Rome is closely monitoring the situation as Venezuelan authorities continue assessing the damage and casualties caused by the earthquakes.

“I am closely following the evolution of the situation following the violent earthquake that struck #Venezuela. I express my solidarity to the Interim President @delcyrodriguezv and #Italy‘s closeness to the Venezuelan people at this very difficult time.,” Tajani wrote on X, extending his condolences to the families of the confirmed victims.

He said Italy is prepared to assist Venezuela and will ask “the EU to activate the civil protection mechanism to coordinate and fund emergency interventions..”

Speaking later in a television interview, Tajani added: “Everything necessary will be done to help the Venezuelan population, which includes a very large Italian community, one of the largest in the world. There are many Italian-Venezuelans, and we are also ready to assist our compatriots.”

EU emergency response

Belgium also confirmed its readiness to provide assistance through the European Union Civil Protection Mechanism. Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prévot said the country remains prepared to support Venezuela after the earthquakes, which by the early hours of Thursday had left a preliminary toll of 32 dead and more than 700 injured.

“The images coming out of Venezuela are heartbreaking,” Prévot said on social media. “My thoughts are with the Venezuelan people, and with everyone waiting for news of a loved one.”

“Should the European Civil Protection Mechanism be activated, Belgium stands ready to help,” he said, adding that Belgium’s crisis center has been mobilized and that its embassy in Bogotá, which also covers Venezuela, is prepared to assist Belgian nationals if necessary.

The EU Civil Protection Mechanism has been activated more than 600 times since its creation in 2001. It pools the emergency response capacities of EU member states and nine participating countries, allowing coordinated deployments both within Europe and internationally.

Solidarity from France, Portugal and Spain

French President Emmanuel Macron also expressed support for Venezuela following the earthquakes.

“Thoughts and support for the Venezuelan people following the earthquake that struck the country. I extend all my solidarity to the victims, their loved ones, and those mobilized on the ground,” Macron said on social media.

France’s Minister Delegate for Francophonie, International Partnerships and French Nationals Abroad, Éléonore Caroit, echoed that message.

“Our full solidarity with the Venezuelan people after the violent earthquakes that struck the country. Our thoughts are with the victims, their families and all the rescue teams mobilized,” she said.

Portugal’s presidency said President António José Seguro is following developments “with concern” and has sent a message of “solidarity and hope” to the Venezuelan people, Portuguese citizens living in Venezuela and the country’s authorities.

Spain also offered assistance during a telephone conversation between Spanish Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares and Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yván Gil. Albares offered support through the Spanish Agency for International Development Cooperation (AECID) and the Military Emergency Unit (UME).

According to Spain’s Foreign Ministry, the two ministers agreed to speak again during the Spanish delegation’s stopover in the Dominican Republic to finalize the proposed assistance.

Mexico Shows Solidarity After Venezuela Twin Earthquakes

Mexico expressed solidarity with Venezuela after twin earthquakes struck the country and activated consular assistance protocols while monitoring the evolving situation.

Emergency crews and residents respond after powerful earthquakes struck Caracas and other parts of Venezuela. Photo: EFE

June 25, 2026 Hour: 12:15 am

Mexico activates consular assistance protocols after twin earthquakes strike Venezuela; no Mexican nationals have been reported affected.

Mexico has expressed solidarity with the Venezuelan people following twin earthquakes measuring 7.2 and 7.5 that struck Caracas and regions across central, northern and northwestern Venezuela on Wednesday, causing widespread damage. The tremors were felt primarily in the Venezuelan capital and were also reported in parts of Colombia.

In a statement, Mexico’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SRE) expressed its deep regret over the destruction caused by the seismic events. The ministry, headed by Foreign Minister Roberto Velasco, said there have been no reports so far of Mexican citizens affected by the earthquakes.

Medical teams, firefighters, security personnel and residents of Caracas took to the streets on Wednesday night to assist people trapped beneath collapsed structures and recover the bodies of those who died.

Security forces and emergency response agencies established camps in the affected areas to coordinate relief operations and assist those impacted by the disaster.

Mexico’s embassy in Venezuela remains closely monitoring the situation. The Foreign Ministry advised Mexican nationals requiring assistance or consular protection to contact the embassy’s emergency numbers or its official social media accounts.

Venezuela Deploys Emergency Rescue Teams After Earthquake, 20 Aftershocks Recorded

The physical devastation of this historic seismic doublet has severely impacted seven federal entities, including the Capital District, Carabobo, Aragua, Miranda, La Guaira, Yaracuy and Trujillo. Photo: EFE.

June 24, 2026 Hour: 10:01 pm

Venezuela’s emergency forces deployed massive rescue operations in Caracas and six states this Wednesday, responding to severe structural collapses caused by a devastating 7.5 magnitude seismic doublet.

Immediately following the severe tectonic movements at 6:05 P.M. local time, thousands of specialized first responders, including firefighters, civil defense officials, state police, and community volunteer brigades, mobilized to the most affected sectors of the country’s capital.

The emergency response teams focused their initial efforts on locating and retrieving citizens trapped under the rubble of collapsed physical structures in various parishes of Caracas.

To coordinate these complex operations, the Mayor of Caracas, Carmen Meléndez, established an emergency tactical command post in the disaster zones to oversee the deployment of resources and medical personnel.

Meanwhile, the sectorial Vice President for Citizen Security and Peace, Diosdado Cabello, made an urgent public appeal on state television, instructing the population to remain in open outdoor areas and avoid returning to high-rise residential or commercial buildings.

“People must understand that they cannot remain inside their homes or offices at this moment; they must not expose themselves to further risk“, Diosdado Cabello declared, explaining that municipal and national security agencies remain fully active across the entire national territory to evaluate structurally compromised houses and public infrastructure.

Severe Damage and Rescues

The physical devastation of this historic seismic doublet has severely impacted seven federal entities, including the Capital District, Carabobo, Aragua, Miranda, La Guaira, Yaracuy and Trujillo. In the eastern Caracas municipality of Chacao, Mayor Gustavo Duque confirmed that fatalities have occurred due to the complete collapse of at least two major building structures.

Duque confirmed that rescue teams successfully saved 16 citizens from the rubble in his jurisdiction. More than 150 municipal security officials, working in close coordination with national civil protection experts, are conducting manual debris removal and using specialized search equipment to locate missing persons.

According to technical reports from the United States Geological Survey (USGS), the incident was a rare seismic sequence in which an initial 7.2 magnitude tremor acted as a direct precursor to the massive 7.5 magnitude main shockwave that shook the coast of Venezuela.

This powerful release of tectonic energy has caused widespread alarm, prompting solidarity among local neighbors who are actively assisting emergency crews to clear blocked avenues and facilitate the transit of medical vehicles.

Venezuela Records Strongest Aftershock Since Quakes

Telesur English

Venezuela recorded its strongest aftershock since Wednesday’s earthquakes as emergency teams continued rescue efforts and damage assessments in La Guaira.

Venezuela earthquake, aftershocks, Funvisis, La Guaira, Naiguatá, 4.5 magnitude, rescue operations, Civil Protection, emergency response.

Emergency teams continue rescue operations in Venezuela after a 4.5-magnitude aftershock struck near Naiguatá early Thursday. Photo: EFE

June 25, 2026 Hour: 4:52 am

A 4.5-magnitude tremor struck near Naiguatá as rescue operations continued in areas affected by Wednesday’s earthquakes.

A series of aftershocks continued to shake Venezuela early Thursday, with the strongest so far measuring magnitude 4.5, according to the Venezuelan Seismological Research Foundation (Funvisis), as emergency crews pressed ahead with rescue operations in areas devastated by Wednesday’s earthquakes.

Funvisis reported that the earthquake struck at 1:48 a.m. local time. The epicenter was located approximately six kilometers west of Naiguatá, in La Guaira state, at a depth of 7.5 kilometers.

The proximity of the epicenter to one of the regions hardest hit by Wednesday’s seismic activity has kept residents and emergency responders on alert as search-and-rescue operations continue.

Authorities also reported several lower-magnitude aftershocks throughout the night, prompting rescue teams to strengthen safety measures while clearing debris in the search for possible survivors.

Firefighters, Civil Protection personnel and the Bolivarian National Armed Force remain deployed across the worst-affected areas, particularly in La Guaira, where emergency operations continue.

Venezuelan authorities said the state has mobilized all available resources to assist those affected and coordinate rescue efforts.

Acting President Delcy Rodríguez called for unity across all sectors of the country to confront the emergency, stressing that the immediate priority is to save lives and provide comprehensive assistance to injured people and affected families.

Funvisis urged residents to remain calm and follow official recommendations amid the possibility of additional aftershocks.

Civil protection authorities continue assessing structural damage to buildings while preparing temporary shelters for families who lost their homes.

As rescue operations continue, Venezuela is also preparing to receive international assistance to support the response to the disaster.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Kenyan Mass Pressure Forces Closure of United States Ebola Treatment Center

Demonstrations and legal actions overturned the controversial decision by Ruto to submit to the Trump administration’s imperialist foreign policy of using Africa as a dumping ground to guard against potential Ebola Virus Disease cases entering the U.S.

By Abayomi Azikiwe

Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday June 24, 2026

Geopolitical Analysis

After weeks of protests and court challenges to the government of Kenyan President William Ruto, the Ministry of Health in Nairobi has announced the cancellation of the plan by the White House to use the East African state as a holding ground for United States citizens suspected of being infected with the Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD). 

The current EVD outbreak has mainly impacted areas in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) where over 1,000 cases have been confirmed causing more than 260 deaths.

In neighboring Uganda as of June 22, there have been 20 laboratory-confirmed cases. Two deaths have occurred in the capital of Kampala and in Wakiso. 15 of these cases are said to have been imported by those who had traveled from DRC along with 5 which have been traced to local sources.

A briefing by the World Health Organization (WHO) indicated that the number of reported cases of the latest EVD outbreak has exceeded those in the first month of any previous outbreak. Health officials at the WHO in Geneva and the African Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (ACDC) based in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia are taking the current situation very seriously in light of the severity of previous outbreaks in Africa.

During the period of late 2013 to early 2016, over 28,000 cases occurred causing 11,000 deaths in three West African states. These cases occurred largely in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea-Conakry. 

With specific reference to the present outbreak, which was detected during mid-May, it prompted the administration of President Donald Trump to request the establishment of a treatment center in Kenya. Immediately the people inside the country strongly objected to the willingness of President William Ruto to accept the request from Trump.

Ruto has been a close ally of the U.S. during his tenure in office. He attempted to justify the acceptance of the Trump proposal on the grounds that Nairobi has ostensibly benefitted from its alliance with Washington over the years. 

A series of legal challenges were filed by the Law Society of Kenya aimed at halting the project which would have been centered near a military base. Mass demonstrations erupted in the area which were suppressed by the Kenyan police resulting in at least three deaths. 

In a report on the decision to scrap the U.S. initiated project, it notes:

“After weeks of legal turmoil and deadly protests, the construction of a US-funded Ebola quarantine building near Laikipia Air Base in Kenya has officially been stopped by Kenya's Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale. Duale announced the cessation of the project after being found in contempt of court for allowing construction to continue despite a court order. The 50-bed facility was announced last month as a treatment site for Americans exposed to the deadly virus in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) or Uganda. Kenyans protested the construction site, saying the building would unnecessarily put the Kenyan population at risk, and add excessive strain to the country’s health system.” (https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/ebola/construction-us-backed-ebola-quarantine-unit-kenya-stopped)

During December 2025, the Kenyan government signed a health cooperation agreement with the U.S. after the elimination of other programs facilitated through the Agency for International Development (USAID). This decision was controversial since the Trump administration reversed previous deals with African states aimed at providing pharmaceuticals and other forms of assistance.

Other African states such as Zambia and Zimbabwe have rejected similar proposals claiming that it would not benefit the people of their countries. In addition, the access to health data by the U.S. would violate the sovereignty of African states.

A report on the Jurist.org website said of the new arrangements between some African governments and the Trump administration that:

“Kenya was the first African country to sign onto President Trump’s America First Global Health Strategy. The US later signed other bilateral health agreements with Rwanda, Liberia, Uganda, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique, Cameroon, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Botswana, Sierra Leone, Madagascar and Ivory Coast in December. What is unique about these deals is that rather than go through health bodies such as GAVI, the World Health Organization, the African Union, and the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the new American strategy is to enter into one-on-one agreements with individual states.” (https://www.jurist.org/commentary/2026/01/kenyas-health-data-deal-with-the-us-what-the-agreement-gets-right-and-what-it-misses-in-the-age-of-ai/)

Healthcare Deals with the U.S. Have Been Rejected by Some African States

The West African state of Ghana rejected the Trump deal along with Zambia and Zimbabwe in the southern region of the continent. Serious concerns persist about the effectiveness of the project as well as the conditions under which the State Department will provide purported assistance.

Quality healthcare in Africa has been hampered by the centuries-long systems of enslavement, colonialism and neo-colonialism. During the colonial period, the health status of Africans was not a concern of the western powers.

Since independence and the advent of the new form of colonialism, where Africa is still largely dependent upon the imperialists for exploitative and unequal terms of trade, underdevelopment remains rampant, sustaining impoverishment. The situation in Kenya is indicative of the contemporary situation where although the country is said to have the largest economy in the East Africa region, many people, particularly youth, face unemployment and very little prospect for future social advancement. 

Kenya has failed to create employment and economic opportunities for its people. In recent years mass demonstrations and strikes by the youth and workers have been met with repression by the security forces resulting in imprisonment, injuries and deaths.  

The Telegraph newspaper in the United Kingdom published an article earlier in the year, saying:

“A deal with Zambia worth $1bn (£0.7bn) has been in limbo since late last year after Washington linked the money to gaining mineral rights in the copper-rich country. Mr. Trump and his secretary of state, Marco Rubio, have rebooted America’s vast international aid spending, claiming it was wasteful, ineffective and was just keeping poor countries dependent on handouts. The overhaul has disrupted long-standing funding to HIV/Aids programs leading to worries the virus is poised to make a rebound in parts of the continent. Mr. Trump’s administration dismantled the $40bn (£30bn)-a-year United States Agency for International Development (USAID) almost overnight, throwing aid programs across Africa into turmoil.” (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/global-health/climate-and-people/ghana-is-latest-african-country-to-reject-trump-aid-deal/)

These new healthcare arrangements between the U.S. and several African Union (AU) member-states will not makeup for the cuts in assistance that have already occurred. Consequently, more people will be sickened and die from preventable and treatable diseases due to the lack of infrastructure and funding.

The same article from the Telegraph quoted above also points to these factors:

“African nations who have signed up include Angola, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Guinea, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Uganda. The new agreements to provide funding for HIV/Aids, malaria, tuberculosis and polio will partly make up for steep aid cuts brought in after Mr. Trump was elected. But countries’ US funding will still be an average of 49 percent down on 2024 levels according to analysis of early deals by the Centre for Global Development.”

Undoubtedly, these changes in U.S. health foreign policy will not improve the social conditions on the African continent. An already debt-ridden African continent will be compelled to spend more of their dwindling national budgets on healthcare. 

Widespread Opposition to Kenyan Policy Reflects the Subservience to Imperialism

The Kenyan government has been classified as a Major Non-member NATO ally. This designation was bestowed on the East African state by the previous administration of President Joe Biden in 2024. Under the Biden administration, Ruto deployed hundreds of Kenyan police to the Caribbean island-nation of Haiti under the guise of restoring stability. 

This deployment of the Kenyan police was carried out despite the widespread opposition within the country. Even the Kenyan courts ruled that the deployment contravened the constitution.

Ruto was present at the recently held G7 Summit in France. Concurrently, it was announced that the Kenyan government was on the verge of signing a minerals agreement with the U.S. 

Kenya still houses British troops which is a carry over from the colonial era. During May, the Kenyan government hosted a conference with French President Emmanuel Macron aimed at reconfiguring the role of Paris in Africa in light of the discontent with their presence in West Africa and other regions of the continent. 

These contradictions will continue until there is a systematic break with the western capitalist system among the AU member-states. Self-reliance in the healthcare, military and financial sectors is a prerequisite for genuine independence, sovereignty and social emancipation across the continent. 

Zimbabwe’s Senate Approves Bill to Delay the Presidential Election and Overhaul the Vote

Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa, center, stands next to his chief election agent and Justice Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi, left, outside the nomination court in Harare, Zimbabwe, June 21, 2023. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi, File)

By Farai Mutsaka

3:06 PM EDT, June 24, 2026

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Zimbabwe ’s Senate on Wednesday approved constitutional amendments that would remove direct presidential elections, delay the next one and extend the tenure of the country’s 83-year-old leader, whose signature is the final step for them to become law.

Seventy-five senators voted in favor of the bill that would postpone elections scheduled for 2028 to 2030 and extend President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s term by two years. Four senators opposed the measure, with some lawmakers from the fractured opposition joining ruling party colleagues in backing the changes.

The bill overhauls the way presidents are chosen, replacing direct popular elections with selection by lawmakers. It also extends the terms of the president and members of parliament to seven years from five.

Critics, including human rights lawyers, activists and some opposition figures, argue that extending presidential terms requires approval through a referendum. Mnangagwa’s supporters counter that Parliament can enact the changes because the constitutional two-term limit would remain intact, even if each term is longer.

The proposed amendments have heightened political tensions in Zimbabwe. Critics of the bill have faced arrest and detention, while others have alleged harassment and intimidation. The southern African country’s courts are yet to rule on several legal challenges to the proposal.

Mnangagwa has been in power since 2017, when the military backed the ouster of his mentor and Zimbabwe’s longtime ruler, Robert Mugabe, who died in 2019.

Although Mnangagwa, one of the world’s oldest leaders, previously said he would step down when his second term expires in 2028, his ruling ZANU-PF party has championed the amendments. Parliament at times has sat late into the night to push the legislation through. The lower house overwhelmingly voted for the bill last week.

Libyan Government Bans Sudanese Entry, Orders Deportations as Refugees Face Rising Hostility

24 June 2026

Passengers board an aircraft at Mitiga International Airport, located east of Tripoli, Libya, on December 12, 2019, AFP photo

 June 2, 2026 (TRIPOLI) – Thousands of Sudanese refugees in Libya are facing severe hardships following a government crackdown on undocumented foreigners that has restricted their movement and stoked fears of targeted hostility.

Since war broke out in Sudan in April 2023, thousands have fled to neighbouring Libya. Many now find themselves facing a new crisis, marked by unemployment, economic hardship, and mounting security threats.

Osama Hammad, the prime minister of the eastern-based government appointed by the parliament, has issued a decree banning citizens from Sudan, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Somalia from entering Libyan territory via all land, sea, and air ports. The order also mandates the deportation of any foreign nationals currently in the country without valid residency permits.

Libyan media reported on Wednesday that the decree exempts accredited diplomatic and consular staff and their families. It also excludes individuals working in the education and healthcare sectors, provided they possess official approvals and employment contracts.

The human toll of the measures has begun to emerge, with one Sudanese refugee in Libya recounting how her unborn child died after public hospitals refused to treat her because she lacked valid legal status or entry permits.

The refugee, who spoke to the media on condition of anonymity, said she went into labour last week and was turned away by multiple government facilities demanding official documents. She was unable to afford the 7,000 Libyan dinars ($1,440) that private hospitals requested.

After suffering severe bleeding and receiving no medical assistance, she returned home, where the fetus died. She was later rushed back to a hospital with a severe fever following appeals from her husband, who offered to donate his kidney to secure her emergency treatment.

Other Sudanese refugees report that local hostility is rising as their numbers grow, amid broader economic anxieties among Libyans who view the newcomers as competitors for scarce jobs.

Refugees face verbal abuse, physical assaults, and armed threats, compounded by growing hate speech online. Some landlords have advised Sudanese tenants to remain indoors and have helped hide their valuables, laptops, and identification cards to protect them from authorities.

Movement remains highly restricted, with many Sudanese avoiding public spaces or streets except for absolute emergencies out of fear of harassment.

Reports on social media indicate that more than 70 Sudanese families tried to flee western Libya toward the eastern border to reach Egypt or return to Sudan. However, they were blocked at a checkpoint in Sirte and remain stranded in the open.

With dangerous land routes, high costs for air travel, and a tightening grip on human smuggling networks, many displaced families say they have been left with no safe options.

Human rights group Amnesty International reported on Wednesday that both the eastern-based administration and the rival, Tripoli-based Government of National Unity have intensified a coordinated crackdown. The group accused both factions of carrying out mass arbitrary arrests, detentions, and collective expulsions that specifically target Sudanese refugees and other Black Sub-Saharan migrants.

State-endorsed xenophobic rhetoric has fueled anti-migrant protests and violent vigilantism across the politically divided nation, the rights group said.

Official figures from the Directorate for Combating Illegal Migration (DCIM) show that the eastern-based branch alone detained between 7,000 and 8,000 migrants pending expulsion, including 4,500 individuals arrested since May. In western Libya, authorities carried out the summary expulsion of more than 800 people from Tripoli’s Mitiga airport during the same period without allowing them to claim asylum.

Amnesty International documented severe abuses within the detention network, noting that the DCIM explicitly refuses to recognize refugee status cards. Detainees have reported severe overcrowding, the denial of necessary medical treatment, and forced deportations directly to Port Sudan.

The escalation comes as the European Union actively seeks to expand its migration cooperation with Libyan actors, including plans to establish a Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre in the eastern city of Benghazi. Amnesty International condemned the EU containment policies, warning that expanding cooperation with these armed groups deepens European complicity in human rights abuses.

Disinformation and Deepfakes Emerge as Silent Killers in Sudan’s Digital War

25 June 2026

A pedestrian walks past a makeshift roadside graveyard in Omdurman, Sudan, on April 27, 2025

June 24, 2026 (KHARTOUM) – In Sudan’s devastating war, flying projectiles and drones are not the only weapons claiming lives and destroying cities. A silent, invisible instrument of warfare is killing civilians in their homes and emergency shelters.

Disinformation and fabricated news broadcast by specialized digital platforms and media rooms are being deployed by both warring factions. The rival forces use these networks as a systematic strategy to control the flow of information, engineer alternative narratives, and wage psychological warfare.

The human cost of this digital panic is stark. Musab al-Sayyid, a resident of the Jabra neighbourhood south of Khartoum, lost his mother and became a refugee after reading an unverified social media post.

Al-Sayyid had been trying to remain in his home with his ill mother, who required constant medical care and diabetes medication. Amid intense fighting between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), he saw a post on an unverified Facebook page warning of an imminent invasion, heavy artillery shelling, and the complete wiping out of the neighbourhood within hours.

“Panic gripped me for my sick mother’s life, and I didn’t think twice,” al-Sayyid said. Driven by collective terror, he packed a few belongings and fled with his mother toward Al-Jazirah state.

During the journey, they were robbed of their money, phones, and their mother’s medical supply bag. They reached a village in Al-Jazirah exhausted and homeless. Deprived of medical care, his mother suffered sharp complications from diabetes and died.

The digital rumours in Sudan’s conflict extend beyond local panic to grand propaganda utilizing artificial intelligence and deepfake technologies.

One of the most widespread psychological operations involved reports claiming the death of RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemetti. Electronic rooms and pro-army livestreamers provided what they called definitive digital evidence of his absence.

One prominent pro-army media figure broadcast a video analyzing the voiceprint and movement of the RSF leader during an official appearance. The commentator claimed the footage showed an AI-generated robot or a body double who had undergone plastic surgery. The narrative was sustained for months to disrupt the RSF’s tribal and military bases.

Civilians have also paid with their freedom after believing false reports of military victories. Suha and her three brothers remained in their home in Wad Madani, the capital of Al-Jazirah state, after pro-army digital platforms celebrated what they described as a decisive defeat of attacking forces on December 18, 2023.

The next morning, residents woke up to find that Wad Madani had fallen and the armed forces had suddenly withdrawn. Suha and her siblings fled on foot toward the army-controlled city of al-Manaqil.

Upon arrival, they were detained at a military intelligence checkpoint. Distraught and lacking identification documents lost during their flight, they were accused of cooperating with rebel forces, a charge stoked by digital platforms targeting alleged “sleeper cells” and fifth columnists.

Rights organizations report that tactical rumours have triggered mass displacement from areas that had not seen active combat. In northern states, Nile River, and Sennar states, anonymous digital rooms broadcast urgent warnings via WhatsApp groups, accompanied by fabricated audio clips of women crying for help or simulated explosions, claiming that massive rebel convoys were approaching to commit atrocities.

In a single night in mid-May 2023, more than 15,000 citizens fled parts of Khartoum North and Omdurman following coordinated rumours. The areas were later found to be free of military threats, while the empty homes were systematically looted.

“Since the outbreak of the April 15 war, the military confrontation has expanded into the media and digital platforms,” said Mohamed al-Hadi, a journalist specializing in content creation and countering hate speech. “A parallel war over public consciousness has emerged, which can be described as a ‘war of narratives’.”

Al-Hadi noted that rumours thrive in environments of anxiety and a lack of reliable information. He added that the conflict has shifted from a political and military level to social, tribal, and ethnic dimensions, undermining peace initiatives by labelling calls for dialogue as treason.

Sociologist Najla Abdel-Mahmoud Ahmed al-Geili said these platforms rely on confirmation bias and echo chambers. “These platforms create closed environments that give users a false sense of certainty, isolating individuals and causing sharp divisions even within single families,” she said.

Psychologist Amina Mohamed al-Shafie warned that continuous exposure to these networks keeps the brain in a permanent state of fight-or-flight, causing sleep disorders, headaches, and a pathological tendency toward isolation and extreme distrust.

Investigative findings and political sources indicate the digital media landscape is funded and managed through a complex network. Sources report that some media rooms receive financial and logistical support directly from the warring parties or via platforms managed from regional countries to purchase sponsored ads and back specific influencers.

The pro-army digital apparatus operates from temporary administrative centres in Port Sudan, anchoring its narrative on state sovereignty and institutional legitimacy.

An anonymous Sudanese army officer said, “War is primarily about managing media, public opinion, and mobilization. The army finds itself forced to activate its digital platforms to debunk the other side’s narratives.”

This network includes official army social media pages, security platforms managed by the General Intelligence Service to track suspected collaborators, and supporting online newspapers like Al-Karama and Sudan Now. It also relies on high-traffic accounts like the “Electronic Deterrence Brigade” and over 1,500 WhatsApp groups to counter anti-war civilian voices.

Conversely, the RSF manages a wide network of digital platforms, with much of its technical administration located outside Sudan, alongside field centres in cities such as Nyala and Ed Damazin.

The RSF apparatus utilizes channels on instant messaging apps under names such as “Peace Government” and “TASIS-FCF” to promote field victories and political narratives, alongside a network of prominent digital influencers and coordinated platforms like Sudan Mix and Al-Haqiqa.

From a legal perspective, international human rights lawyer Al-Moez Hadra argued that digital media tools in the Sudanese war have been transformed into destructive weapons used to engineer collective emotion and fuel polarization.

“The danger of these digital activities is not limited to media disinformation,” Hadra said. “It may legally rise to the level of war crimes or crimes against humanity, especially when linked to broadcasting organized hate speech, inciting violence on an ethnic basis, or spreading rumours that directly cause deadly forced displacement.”

Al-Sadiq Ali Hassan, a member of the Sudanese Group for the Defence of Rights and Freedoms, stated that the speed of digital sharing has turned online media into a primary battlefield. He warned that the escalation of tribal alignment over national citizenship threatens to fragment Sudan into unstable, competing entities similar to historical conflicts in Somalia and Libya.

This report was supported by the Thomson Foundation.

El Burhan Promises Probe into ‘Egypt Attack on Sudanese Miners’

22/06/2026 20:43 

PORT SUDAN / EL RATAJ

Sovereignty Council President and Commander-in-chief of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) Lt Gen Abdelfattah El Burhan meets with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, in Cairo, March 2024 (File photo: Spokesperson for the Egyptian Presidency / Facebook)

Sovereignty Council President and Commander-in-chief of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) Lt Gen Abdelfattah El Burhan, has promised to investigate reports that Egyptian forces attacked Sudanese miners near the border, amid mounting calls for an independent international investigation into alleged Egyptian military operations inside Sudanese territory.

Speaking during a visit to El Rataj in Red Sea state today, El Burhan said authorities would investigate reports that Sudanese citizens had been attacked after crossing into Egypt. His remarks follow allegations by miners that Egyptian forces carried out aerial bombardments in a gold mining area on June 17 and 18, killing and injuring dozens. Miners say the site lies inside Sudanese territory.

El Burhan’s visit came amid heightened tensions in El Rataj, near the Sudanese-Egyptian border, where disputes between the Bishariyn and Rashaida communities over market ownership and administration have raised fears of tribal clashes.

Last week, the Red Sea State Security Committee deployed military reinforcements to the area following an emergency meeting chaired by Governor Maj Gen Mustafa Mohamed Nour.

Authorities said the deployment aimed to restore order, arrest offenders and enforce state authority in the border region, which hosts lucrative gold-mining sites and serves as a route for smuggling networks.

Tensions escalated after calls to expel Rashaida residents from the area. The Free Rashaida Youth Organisation rejected the demands, arguing that no group has the right to claim ownership of state land. The group called on authorities to register land rights, enforce the law and protect residents from extortion.

Addressing residents, El Burhan stressed that all Sudanese have the right to live and work anywhere in the country. He announced that army units deployed to the area would remain permanently and warned against carrying weapons, extortion and attempts to take the law into one’s own hands.

Egyptian Armed Forces announced a security operation in the country’s southern border region, saying they had arrested 223 suspects, including 136 foreign nationals, and seized vehicles, weapons, communications equipment and mining machinery. Egyptian authorities said the operation targeted illegal gold mining, smuggling and irregular migration.

Sudanese ambassadors and diplomats condemned what they described as Egyptian aerial bombardments and ground incursions into Sudanese territory and called for an urgent, transparent international investigation.

In a statement by the Sudanese Assembly of Ambassadors and Diplomats yesterday, they said the alleged attacks targeted civilian mining areas as far as 60 kilometres south of the Sudan-Egypt border and constituted a serious violation of international law.

The group also criticised the de facto authorities in Port Sudan for what it described as “suspicious silence” and a failure to protect Sudanese sovereignty. It urged the United Nations, the African Union, IGAD and the League of Arab States to investigate the incident and take steps to protect civilians.

The Sudanese Communist Party and the Civil Democratic Alliance of Revolutionary Forces (Sumoud) also condemned the reported attacks. Both groups called for accountability and support for victims, while Sumoud warned that continued foreign intervention risks deepening Sudan’s conflict and humanitarian crisis.

Sudan War: Int’l Pressure Grows as Fears Mount Over Escalation in El Obeid

24/06/2026 15:14 

KAMPALA / EL OBEID / AMSTERDAM

Smoke rises over El Obeid following a drone attack in Jube 2026 (Photo: Supplied)

International efforts to address Sudan’s deepening crisis have intensified amid growing warnings from the United Nations and foreign governments about an expanding conflict and worsening humanitarian conditions, particularly in the city of El Obeid, capital of North Kordofan. As previously reported by Radio Dabanga, El Obeid has become the focus of mounting international concern, with diplomats and aid agencies warning that it could face a similar fate to El Fasher, where months of fighting have been accompanied by widespread reports of atrocities and civilian suffering.

Diplomatic push for new political process

Massad Boulos, the US president’s envoy for African and Arab affairs, said he had held what he described as a “highly productive” meeting with the UN secretary general’s personal envoy for Sudan, Pekka Haavisto, to discuss ways of ending the war and advancing a comprehensive political settlement.

According to Boulos, the talks focused on the work of the so-called Quint mechanism, which brings together the African Union, IGAD, the Arab League, the European Union, and the United Nations. The aim, he said, is to launch an inclusive political dialogue led by Sudanese civilians that could pave the way for a lasting ceasefire and a transition to civilian rule.

Boulos added that both he and Haavisto are due to brief the UN Security Council on Sudan, where they will stress the need for an urgent humanitarian truce and unhindered access for aid deliveries.

Warnings over a possible assault on El Obeid

In a post on X, Boulos said he had also spoken directly with the leadership of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), urging them to refrain from any actions that could endanger civilians in and around El Obeid.

He said the United States was deeply concerned by reports that RSF forces and allied groups were massing around the city, increasing the risk of attacks on civilians and potential mass atrocities amid Sudan’s devastating humanitarian crisis.

On Wednesday, seven European countries called for an immediate halt to violence targeting El Obeid. In a joint statement issued by the UK Foreign Office and signed by Britain, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands and Norway, the governments said there were credible indications that an attack on the city could be imminent.

The statement described the situation as a critical moment requiring international action and called on the RSF to halt its offensive immediately.

The UK foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, warned that El Obeid was on the brink of atrocities that could deepen the wounds already inflicted on Sudan by the fighting in El Fasher.

“We cannot allow that to happen again,” she said.

Cooper added that the world had witnessed “the horrors” committed during the RSF assault on El Fasher last year, including reports of rape, looting, and killings of civilians.

“This cannot be repeated,” she said.

UN steps up efforts to prevent escalation

Meanwhile, the UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric revealed that Haavisto held talks last week with Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, the RSF leader widely known as Hemedti.

According to Dujarric, the discussion focused on the need to reduce tensions in El Obeid, which has come under repeated drone attacks attributed to the RSF, and on concerns that continued military operations could further worsen an already dire humanitarian situation.

The two men also discussed efforts by the Quint group to support a political process through engagement with Sudanese civilian actors. Haavisto is continuing consultations with regional and international partners in an effort to prevent the city from descending into a wider confrontation.

Drone attacks damage civilian infrastructure

The United Nations has warned that the security situation in and around El Obeid is deteriorating rapidly, with escalating violence threatening civilians and disrupting essential services.

A UN spokesperson said drone attacks had struck several locations in the city in recent days, damaging an electricity substation and a fuel facility.

The organisation renewed its call for civilians and civilian infrastructure to be protected in accordance with international humanitarian law and urged all parties to ensure that humanitarian assistance can reach those in need safely and without delay.

‘Managing the crisis rather than solving it’

Not everyone is convinced that the flurry of diplomatic activity will produce meaningful results.

The Sudanese journalist Haidar El Mukashfi offered a critical assessment of international and UN efforts, arguing that they appear more focused on managing the crisis than resolving it.

Speaking to Radio Dabanga, he said the increase in diplomatic contacts reflected genuine concern that El Obeid could slide into a major confrontation, but questioned whether such efforts could succeed in the absence of effective mechanisms to compel the warring parties to change course.

El Mukashfi noted that the past two years had demonstrated the limited impact of international statements and warnings, despite repeated alerts over developments in Khartoum, El Fasher and elsewhere.

Political warnings alone, he argued, are insufficient without clear commitments on the ground.

He also highlighted El Obeid’s strategic and humanitarian importance. The city is home to large numbers of civilians and displaced people, meaning that any major escalation could carry a devastating human cost and potentially recreate the “El Fasher scenario” if large-scale fighting erupts.

At the same time, he suggested that the relatively early international response could help reduce the risk of escalation if it is accompanied by genuine political pressure, the opening of humanitarian corridors and clear obligations imposed on the parties to the conflict. As diplomatic efforts intensify, concerns continue to grow that the war could spread further across Sudan. For many observers, the key challenge is whether international diplomacy can be translated into concrete action capable of preventing another humanitarian catastrophe.

Sudanese Armed Forces Claim Gains in Blue Nile as RSF Take Furuawiya in North Darfur

24/06/2026 18:54 

BLUE NILE / NORTH DARFUR / AMSTERDAM

Rapid Support Forces claim control of the Sarkam area in South Blue Nile - June 2026 - (Social Media)

The Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) claim to have seized a strategic area in Blue Nile state, while the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have announced fresh territorial gains in North Darfur, highlighting the continuing fluidity of frontlines across the country.

The SAF 4th Infantry Division in Ed Damazin said on Tuesday that troops from the 13th Infantry Brigade had carried out a large-scale clearing operation in areas extending beyond Abdagla and Ashambo.

According to the military, the operation culminated in the capture of El Bar, described as a stronghold of the SPLM-N faction led by Joseph Tuka.

The SAF said it had seized weapons and military equipment during the operation and taken a number of soldiers prisoner.

Fighting in Blue Nile state has continued since January, with the SAF and allied forces exchanging control of various positions. The clashes have displaced tens of thousands of people, many of whom are living in difficult humanitarian conditions.

RSF announces further advances in North Darfur

Separately, field commanders from the RSF announced on Wednesday that their forces had taken control of Furuawiya, east of Ambro in North Darfur state.

The capture of the area comes a day after the RSF said it had seized Ambro. Last week, the group also claimed control of the Orshi Reservoir area in Ambro locality.

The International Organization for Migration said more than 2,200 people were displaced last week from the Orshi Reservoir area and neighbouring villages.

The Joint Force currently controls the localities of Tina and Karnoi in North Darfur, while the RSF holds most of the rest of the state. The exception is Tawila locality, which remains under the control of the Sudan Liberation Movement led by Abdul Wahid El Nur.

Drone strikes draw condemnation

Elsewhere, several organisations and public bodies condemned a drone strike that targeted El Siyah market, east of Mellit, on Tuesday morning.

The attack reportedly set the market ablaze, destroying it completely, killing and injuring a number of people and causing extensive property damage.

Witnesses also reported that a wedding convoy in the Sari area was struck four days earlier, killing more than 14 civilians instantly. Most of the victims were relatives of the groom, according to local accounts.

The United Nations and several international organisations have condemned drone attacks carried out by both sides in Sudan’s war. Such strikes have killed more than 1,000 people since the beginning of this year, according to international assessments.

As the conflict enters its fourth year, civilians continue to bear the brunt of the violence, with drone warfare increasingly extending the reach of the fighting into markets, villages and other civilian areas far from the front lines.

New UN Human Rights Report: ‘Brutal Use of Sexual Violence in Sudan’

24/06/2026 14:30 GENEVA / AMSTERDAM

Women await mediac treatment in Sudan - (File photo for illustration: OHCHR/Anthony Headley)

A new UN Human Rights (OHCHR) report published yesterday lays bare the brutality and magnitude of conflict-related sexual violence in Sudan since the outbreak of the war in April 2023, and its profound, long-term impacts on victims, families and communities. The report finds that sexual violence has accompanied the geographic spread of the conflict, as well as displacement journeys. It has been used consistently as a tactic to terrorise and traumatise the civilian population.

“Unless the patterns and impacts of conflict-related sexual violence are addressed through justice, victim-centred responses and efforts to tackle stigma and discrimination, peace and social cohesion in Sudan risk being undermined for years to come,” says the report.

“As I warned at the end of my mission to Sudan in January, sexual violence is being used as a weapon of war. This is a war crime and, if committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack, a crime against humanity,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk.

Crimes against humanity — 546 incidents of conflict-related sexual violence in 16 of the 18 states of Sudan…

In Darfur, there are reasonable grounds to believe that some acts of sexual violence, committed in the context of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population, may amount to crimes against humanity, says the report.

The OHCHR says it has verified 546 incidents of conflict-related sexual violence in 16 of the 18 states of Sudan from the beginning of the conflict to mid-April this year, affecting at least 838 victims – 539 women, 284 girls, eight men and seven boys.

These figures represent only the tip of the iceberg of the actual magnitude of incidents, says the report, as persistent underreporting has obscured the full scale of the prevalence of sexual violence.

Most of the verified incidents were attributed to men in Rapid Support Forces (RSF) uniforms, its affiliates and Arab militias. Incidents have also been attributed to the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), affiliated security actors, the Joint Forces, other armed movements and armed militias.

Since the outbreak of the conflict, says the report, sexual violence has been perpetrated in conjunction with systematic and coordinated attacks on civilians as a tactic of war. Forms of sexual violence documented by the OHCHR include rape and gang rape, sexual slavery, forced marriage, forced prostitution, sexual torture, and trafficking for the purpose of sexual violence.

‘Almost a quarter of the incidents involved gang rape…’

Almost a quarter of the incidents involved gang rape, the report says. One documented attack involved at least 10 perpetrators who raped a girl. Repeated patterns include the use of sexual violence as a means of controlling civilian movement, abductions linked to sexual violence, sexual slavery and sexual violence in detention. The OHCHR says it has documented the cases of at least 85 women and girls who were held in sexual slavery and compelled to undertake domestic labour and generate income.

The report also documents the deaths of at least 13 victims (women, men and children), mostly following brutal gang rapes. The youngest was nine years old. Many more suffered from serious medical complications exacerbated by the absence of functioning health facilities. At least 59 women and girls became pregnant or bore children from rape.

Sexual violence has been perpetrated as retaliation based on perceived affiliation with specific parties, in addition to ethnically motivated attacks, the report finds. Many ethnic Masalit victims from West Darfur shared that attackers asked about their tribe before raping them. Victims reported having been told, in 2023, “This year, all of you Masalit girls will deliver our children,” and “If you are Masalit, we will slaughter you today”.

Türk called for timely, independent and impartial investigations into acts of sexual violence committed during the conflict, in order to ensure accountability.

“Persistent impunity is clearly deepening harms and reinforcing cycles of violations and abuses,” Türk said.

“All perpetrators, including those exercising command responsibility, must be held fully accountable, and victims must be guaranteed access to effective remedy, including reparation.”

It calls on the parties to the conflict to, among other things, take concrete and verifiable measures to prevent sexual violence and urges the international community to ensure justice and accountability remain central to their support for efforts towards a ceasefire and resolution of the conflict.

A pattern two decades in the making

Prominent Sudan scholar Prof Eric Reeves, who is also co-chair of Team Zamzam, points out: “There is a reluctance to come to terms with the reality of rape in Darfur and elsewhere in Sudan with the expansion of the war by the RSF…”. Team Zamzam is a group of women, originally formed in 2021, who provide counselling to victims of sexual violence. They began operations in the vast Zamzam camp for displaced people near the El Fasher, until the camp was all but obliterated during the April 13 2025 RSF ground offensive, and has since moved most of its operations to assisit Sudanese refugees in eastern Chad, and is one of the only resources for girls and women traumatised by sexual violence and abuse.

A mother with her malnourished child in the now sestroyed Zamzam camp for internally displaced people near El Fasher in North Darfur (File photo: Team Zamam)

The fall of El Fasher in late 2025, which was accompanied by mass rape, saw the Saudi Maternity Hospital sustain a brutal attack by the RSF. Approximately 460 people were killed inside, many of them patients.

“That was one of the most shocking episodes of the war to date,” Reeves said. “There is a reluctance to come to terms with the reality of rape in Darfur and elsewhere in Sudan with the expansion of the war by the RSF.”

‘No safe place for women and girls in Darfur’

As previously covered by Radio Dabanga, a report entitled There is something I want to tell you…: Surviving the Sexual Violence Crisis in Darfur published in March 2026 by Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF), documents widespread and systematic sexual violence across roads, fields and displacement camps, both in acute conflict zones and far from front lines. ‘Sexual violence is a defining feature of this conflict — not confined to frontlines, but pervasive across communities… this war is being fought on the backs and bodies of women and girls,’ Ruth Kauffman, MSF, Emergency Health Manager pointed out at the time.

“Given the cultural taboo associated with rape, women are reluctant to report it to the few medical workers present in refugee camps, which can lead to further medical complications of injuries they may have sustained during the rape,” a 2004 Amnesty International report noted.

Sexual Violence Used as a 'Weapon of War' Since Start of Sudan Conflict, UN Says

Sexual violence is being used “consistently as a tactic and weapon of war” since the conflict in Sudan erupted three years ago, according to a new report by the United Nations Human Rights Office.

Researchers verified 546 incidents of conflict-related sexual violence in 16 of the country’s 18 states from the start of the war until mid-April this year.

The UN’s Human Rights Commissioner Volker Türk is calling for independent and impartial investigations.

“Persistent impunity is clearly deepening harms and reinforcing cycles of violations and abuses,” Türk said.

“All perpetrators, including those exercising command responsibility, must be held fully accountable, and victims must be guaranteed access to effective remedy, including reparation.”

The report documents 838 victims, the majority of them women but also including girls, men and boys. Those figures represent just the tip of the iceberg, the report states, pointing to persistent underreporting of cases.

Documented forms of sexual violence documented include rape and gang rape, sexual slavery, forced marriage, forced prostitution, sexual torture, and trafficking for the purpose of sexual violence.

At least 13 victims died, mostly following brutal gang rapes, according to the report. The youngest was nine years old.

In Darfur, there are grounds to believe that some acts of sexual violence, committed in the context of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population, may amount to crimes against humanity, the report says.

Most of the verified cases were attributed to the Rapid Support Forces and its affiliates, but incidents have also been attributed to the Sudanese Armed Forces and associated groups.

‘Why Aren’t They Listening?’: For Many Black Residents, This Blue Hill Avenue Transit Plan Repeats Old Problems

By Emma Platoff Globe Staff,

June 24, 2026, 5:30 a.m.

Heavy traffic filled Blue Hill Avenue on a spring day. (VIDEO BY RAPHAEL CHINCA/GLOBE STAFF, DRONE BY DANIELLE PARHIZKARAN/GLOBE STAFF)

In the middle of Blue Hill Avenue’s weeknight chaos — the triple-parked cars and the scooters zipping around them; the parents gripping their children’s hands as they step off the sidewalk to cross; the city bus lumbering along, belching and hissing — one segment of the street is stagnant: the wide, empty median.

On a street where everyone is battling for space, and every inch is contested, this barren strip sits right in the center of everything, in most places entirely useless. The cracked concrete is a reminder of the inaction and disinvestment that’s made this crucial artery through Black Boston so frustrating and dangerous to navigate.

“Cambridge has beautiful streets and bike lanes, beautiful bus stops, all that,” said Glorian Lee, 18, who lives near Franklin Park and takes the 28 bus down Blue Hill Avenue every day. “Why can we not have the same thing?”

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City and state officials say they finally have a plan to make things better. They see the neglected median as the key to transforming Blue Hill Ave. into something like the functional, even pleasant boulevard it was 80 years ago. The pitch is this: Take the beleaguered buses out of the side lane of traffic, where they get stuck behind the double-parkers and right-turners, and put them in the exclusive, unencumbered center, in new dedicated bus lanes. There, they can move more swiftly, ferrying the people of Mattapan, Roxbury, and Dorchester — who are some of the heaviest users of public transit, but suffer through some of the least reliable service — to and from their schools, jobs, and dentist appointments. It’s the anchor of a larger plan for the avenue that also includes trees, crosswalks, streetlights, and new sidewalks.

After decades of stops and starts, the money for improvements is finally there. The federal government has come through with grants totaling $95 million, while the state and city are set to kick in $51 million and $18 million, respectively. But Mayor Michelle Wu has gone quiet on the center bus lane proposal, caught between competing pressures to remake the city’s streets for the better and to avoid alienating the Black voters already frustrated with her.

The trouble is, many people in the neighborhoods branching out from Blue Hill Avenue are deeply opposed to this plan, a skepticism wrought by decades of broken promises and worse. They fear that adding a bus lane and removing some dedicated travel lanes would slow car commutes that are impossible already, or that street improvements could limit parking and gut the local businesses that are the spirit of the corridor. Alongside promises of better lighting and safer crosswalks, the latest version of the plan also includes bike lanes — which to many represent the first, galloping horseman of the gentrification apocalypse. Some neighbors have gone so far as to ask the Trump administration to rescind $80 million in federal funding, an effort to halt the project.

Supporters say they do not anticipate any harmful effects on businesses, and officials intend to preserve as much as 90 percent of parking. But those assurances do little for communities that have every reason to doubt what the government says. The MBTA in 2025 spent $300,000 on a traffic analysis, but never released it to the public, adding to worries about what officials have planned.

When a corridor is neglected for so long, promises to improve it can feel like something nefarious. Many in Mattapan, Roxbury, and Dorchester say they feel like the plan for a center-running bus lane — along with other government efforts to increase housing and boost businesses along the avenue — is being forced on them despite protests.

Mac Hudson, who lives on Blue Hill Avenue, spoke at a March community meeting addressing the Blue Hill Avenue center bus lane proposal.

Which is to say, the current debate is about much more than a bus lane. It’s about trust, and what happens when the government has done so little to help and so much to harm a neighborhood that it has little credibility left. It’s about who gets a say in Blue Hill Avenue’s future.

“Why are we even here tonight? They already know that we don’t want this,” said West Ward, 25, at a March community meeting on the bus lane. “Why aren’t they listening to the people who live here?”

The story of Blue Hill Avenue is a story of disinvestment. Once home to Jewish neighborhoods, the corridor swiftly transformed in the mid-20th century when racist housing policies funneled Black residents there, as banks refused to give them home loans elsewhere in the city. Now, its neighborhoods are home to some of Boston’s most diverse communities, Black families who trace their roots here back generations and newer arrivals from Haiti or Cape Verde.

Linda Tibere danced along with the music on Blue Hill Ave. during the 20th Haitian-American Unity Parade in May 2022.  

A century ago, a streetcar ran between down Blue Hill Avenue all the way to Mattapan Square. Families queued up to ride it through a vibrant cultural corridor with meat markets, furniture stores, synagogues, and historic theaters. But in the 1950s, as cars became more prevalent and white families left the city for the suburbs, authorities ripped out the streetcar and redesigned the avenue to add a traffic lane in each direction. The new setup made it easier for commuters to travel in and out from the suburbs in their cars. But it also made Blue Hill Avenue less of a destination for shopping and dining, and did little for the people who lived there.

They “pull the trolleys out, and create this road, that is a huge road, that’s designed to get people through my neighborhood and not to my neighborhood,” said state Representative Russell Holmes, a Mattapan Democrat.

As long ago as the 1970s, city and state transit officials recognized that removing the trolley had condemned the neighborhoods to poor public transit — a “major [factor] contributing to the deterioration of the Blue Hill Avenue community,” according to a city report from that time. Archival documents show officials wanted to restore the trolley and even weighed extending the Orange Line beneath the corridor.

“Fixed-rail trolley service is the preferred technology,” a 1979 report concluded. “It has to be made easy for Corridor residents and others to reach these important destinations.”

The plan for rail was ultimately rejected as costly and infeasible.

An outbound streetcar passed inbound passengers waiting on Blue Hill Avenue at Arbutus Street in October 1929.

As the decades wore on, trains and trolleys expanded elsewhere in the MBTA system, including an extension of the Green Line into Somerville that took three decades and cost $2.3 billion. But rail never returned to Blue Hill Avenue.

It was not the only time such transit was taken from Boston’s Black communities.

“When they took the Orange Line away from Nubian Square, we were supposed to have a replacement, and we never got that,” said City Councilor Brian Worrell, who argues his constituents deserve subway service, not just buses. “It’s like we’ve been redlined out of the rapid rail infrastructure — and you’re talking about one of the highest transit rider corridors. Why doesn’t Blue Hill Ave. get what Dorchester Ave. has?"

By 2009, when at last federal funding was available for a project to refurbish the street, the proposal was for “bus rapid transit” called the 28X, after the 28 bus route that ran up the corridor.

Rail “was never feasible,” said Jim Aloisi, who shepherded the effort as transportation secretary under Governor Deval Patrick. “I heard those voices back then, and we had plenty of discussions about it, but I just had to politely say, ‘I know that’s what you think you want, or what you want, but that’s not feasible.’”

Instead, Aloisi said, he wanted to prove to residents of the corridor that the 28X bus could be “really, really, really good, and function as well as light rail.”

Skeptics in the neighborhood felt like they were being presented with a fully formed plan — one with no room for their feedback to shape it, said Vivien Morris, a longtime community leader in Mattapan who recalled the opposition.

“That’s been our history — being treated negatively and pushed around town,” she said. “That’s why if the initiative came through the city, then people feel like, first we have to push back in order to make sure that our voices are heard.”

The 28X quickly fell apart. Facing widespread opposition from neighbors, Massachusetts turned down the federal money, leaving Blue Hill Avenue’s problems to fester.

Not everyone in the community was happy to see the 28X project die. Its collapse inspired Holmes to run for state representative. Now, he keeps a rendering of the rejected route in his office.

“I’m still just in disbelief that we made that decision,” Holmes said. Elected officials had turned down tens of millions of dollars, he said, when “what we should be doing is bringing resources back to our Black neighborhood that has been under-resourced and under-delivered to for decades.”

In 2019, Boston officials decided to try again. Recognizing the failures of the previous, state-run effort, the city under Mayor Marty Walsh took a more active role in planning the bus project, hoping to rebuild trust in the skeptical communities around Blue Hill Avenue.

“This is a part of the city that has been underserved over the last several decades,” Vineet Gupta, the city Transportation Department’s planning director, told GBH News at the time. “We really want to start learning from people who live in the corridor.”

But after seven years, hundreds of survey responses, and thousands of public comments, trust is still frayed, and residents remain dubious that the plan will help them. Meanwhile, the consequences of inaction on Blue Hill Avenue plague everyone who lives near it.

The corridor is one of Boston’s most dangerous, with a collision requiring EMS transport every three days on average, according to city data. For pedestrians, crossing the wide street can be treacherous. And driving it is a singularly maddening experience.

“I do whatever I can to avoid Blue Hill Ave.,” said Ihioma Breneus, 42, who lives in Mattapan.

Residents and commuters complain about the traffic, particularly during peak times; they gripe about double- sometimes triple-parking; they fear for their safety, and their kids’ safety, when they cross the street or, God forbid, ride a bike.

“Blue Hill Avenue is as unsafe today as it was 50 years ago,” said Tiffany Cogell, who grew up in Roxbury and now heads the Boston Cyclists Union. As a kid, she recalled, she was never allowed to cross the wide street — meaning though she lived just a few minutes away, she couldn’t get to Franklin Park on foot. “There is no reason in the world that I’m about to be 57 years old, and Blue Hill Avenue doesn’t feel any different or safer than it did when I was a little girl.”

If there is consensus on the problems, though, there is still no consensus on the solution. Neighbors are sharply divided on, if not overwhelmingly opposed to, the center-running bus plan. An analysis prepared for the MBTA found the plan would speed up the 28 bus by as much as 15 minutes at peak times, while slowing down cars by as much as six minutes during the morning rush, in part because the latest version of the plan would get rid of some traffic lanes. Critics fret over that increase, and argue officials should make other improvements — more trees, safer crosswalks, better lights — without changing the bus path.

“Nobody’s asking for it,” Breneus said of the center lane. Many fear the revamp could bring gentrification, and say the city isn’t doing enough to prevent that.

Two city councilors who represent Dorchester and Roxbury are still pushing for rail, not bus service, along Blue Hill Avenue. Worrell and Councilor Miniard Culpepper on Tuesday unveiled a plan to extend the Orange Line beneath the corridor. Officials owe their neighborhoods faster, better transit, they said.

“We want them to live up to their promise from 40 years ago,” Culpepper said.

Glorian Lee took the 28 bus from Franklin Park Zoo to work in Mattapan Square in May.  

But even if political leaders were to embrace the idea — and Wu has already sounded skeptical — any rail expansion would be costly and time-intensive. For some, the bus lane at least offers a quicker answer to Blue Hill Avenue’s problems.

Lee, the 18-year-old, lives in Dorchester, just a few miles from his part-time job in Mattapan Square. The bus ride should take about half an hour, but one recent Thursday, Lee left home two hours early, knowing he could be delayed. Once, he said, he was so late for work that he missed his two-hour shift entirely.

At his stop near Franklin Park, Lee tracked the bus on an app, knowing that the schedule is merely a suggestion.

“Another bus bunching!” he lamented, referring to delays that made his bus arrive at the same time as the one scheduled for 15 minutes later. That day, he made it to work before his shift started. But he often thinks about all the things he could do with the luxury of a bit more time.

There is a clear generational divide between younger transit users who take the bus and want a better one, and older commuters who drive. At a public meeting this spring, former state senator Dianne Wilkerson described the center bus lane as yet another unwanted change that officials were inflicting on her community.

“Nobody takes a bus to go pick up the pizza,” she said. “Nobody takes a bus to go pick up their kids. … That’s not how anybody lives. So we will not have this forced on us.”

It hasn’t helped that the Blue Hill Avenue plan is being debated alongside two other controversial developments nearby. Wu is pushing to turn Franklin Park’s White Stadium into a professional soccer venue, and the mayor also caused uproar when she shelved a plan for a life sciences and affordable housing project in Roxbury in favor of building a new high school on the site.

“You have three projects affecting a really marginalized community, and at this point they feel really unheard,” said Chevanese VanDyke, 46, who lives in Dorchester. “No bus is going to make up for that.”

For transit officials who want the project to go forward, the next few months will be about persuading people like VanDyke. The MBTA has promised more public engagement, and planners emphasize the design is far from final, meaning some of the more unpopular features in early sketches may change. The MBTA won’t go ahead with the project if Wu doesn’t want it, and for the mayor, there are landmines everywhere. Elected with the support of Boston’s Black communities and its transit advocates, she has now alienated swaths of both. Any choice she makes on Blue Hill Avenue could further incense at least one group.

Aloisi blamed critics for exaggerating how much parking might be lost, and how much businesses might suffer.

“Do you want to condemn those bus riders, those transit-dependent residents of the city, to a lifetime of substandard transit access on the altar of false information?” he said. “This is really a moral responsibility to make something like this happen and not to let it fail again.”

For Blue Hill Avenue to get better, Holmes said, it has to change. Beautifying the streets and leaving the traffic setup as is will not solve the problems, he said.

Alongside the bus lane, he’d like to see two traffic lanes in each direction, and as much parking retained as possible. He can live with losing some trees from the plan.

“We’re not going to have any bike lanes,” Holmes added. “Forget that.”

Those tweaks could assuage some fears about congestion and gentrification.

“So much of this is the Black community saying, ‘We don’t trust that this is for our community,’” Holmes said. “‘Is this for us?’ And I say the answer is, ‘Yes. Don’t move.’”

The distrust is hard to get around. But if the city and state don’t have a record of doing right by Black neighborhoods, Holmes said, “at least I do.”

He can see a future where the government, with the support of the neighborhood, fixes a problem it helped create. “You’re going to see young folks going to and from school on the buses,” he said. “You’re going to see those who are in most need.”

That’s who the improvements are for, Holmes emphasized. “We’re looking to serve the people who live in our community.”

Now, he just has to convince them, too.

Emma Platoff can be reached at emma.platoff@globe.com. Follow her @emmaplatoff.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Kenyan Health Minister Halts Controversial US-backed Ebola Site

By Africa News

Kenya has ordered a halt to preparations for a US-run Ebola quarantine facility, the health minister told a court Tuesday after being held in contempt for ignoring a previous stop-work order.

"I have directed the immediate and complete cessation of any intended construction, site preparation, or related activities concerning the Laikipia Air Base facility pending the hearing and determination of the substantive petition or until further orders of this court," health minister Aden Duale said.

The facility at Laikipia Air Base, about 200 kilometres from Nairobi, was intended to treat or quarantine US citizens evacuated from DR Congo, the epicenter of an ongoing Ebola outbreak. Kenyans have strongly opposed the plan and there have been deadly protests since it was announced last month.

Duale apologised to the court and said he had understood the court order to apply only to Kenya's collaboration with the US, not to the construction of the facility.

"I was driven by a zealous attempt to ensure that public health is always assured," Duale said.

The court accepted Duale's apology and spared him a possible jail sentence. But it issued a warning against any future non-compliance.

Washington has pledged $13.5 million to support Kenya's Ebola preparedness efforts, but critics oppose what they see as colonial overtones in the arrangement.

UK Placed UAE Ties Over Preventing Atrocities in El-Fasher: Testimony

By Al Mayadeen English

23 Jun 2026 19:22

A war crimes investigator told UK MPs that Britain failed to act on warnings of mass killings in Sudan’s El Fasher due to UAE diplomatic concerns.

The British government has been accused of deliberately suppressing intelligence and obstructing international action during the genocidal assault on El-Fasher in Sudan, where an estimated 60,000 civilians were killed, according to testimony presented to a parliamentary committee.

The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) reportedly received repeated alerts describing the situation as potentially one of the largest mass casualty events of the 21st century. These warnings came ahead of the UAE-backed RSF’s assault on El-Fasher after the extended siege.

Nathaniel Raymond, executive director of the Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL) at the Yale School of Public Health, told the International Development Committee that his team provided UK officials with real-time intelligence for more than two years. He said the data consistently indicated that the siege would result in large-scale civilian killings.

Raymond said officials were informed that the situation was escalating toward mass atrocities, yet policy action did not follow at a level he described as necessary to prevent the outcome.

Economic ties prioritized over genocide prevention

Raymond told MPs that UK officials prioritized diplomatic and economic relations with the United Arab Emirates over preventing mass civilian deaths in El-Fasher. He said concerns over the UAE’s role in the conflict influenced how the UK responded to the intelligence provided.

He stated that officials “prioritised HMG’s [His Majesty’s Government’s] economic, security, and diplomatic relationships with the UAE above preventing the intentional starvation, forced displacement, and the genocidal slaughter of tens of thousands of civilians living in El Fasher and its surrounding communities,” in written testimony to MPs.

The HRL had used satellite imagery and open-source intelligence to track developments in El-Fasher. He said UK officials were given a detailed analysis showing the likely trajectory of the siege and its humanitarian consequences.

The UK, as the UN Security Council penholder on Sudan, had access to sufficient intelligence to develop policy responses that could have altered the outcome, including potential sanctions and diplomatic pressure, he said.

El-Fasher drowns in civilian blood

The RSF captured El-Fasher in October after an 18-month siege. UN investigators later said the operation bore the hallmarks of genocide.

Raymond told MPs that at least 60,000 people may have been killed in the weeks following the city’s fall, based on satellite imagery and open-source intelligence. He compared the scale of destruction to some of the most lethal modern mass casualty events.

The UK, he stated, had policy options available during the escalation, including sanctions targeting individuals linked to external support networks for the RSF, arguing that stronger diplomatic pressure could have disrupted weapons flows and altered the course of events.

He told MPs that UK officials acknowledged internal constraints linked to political sensitivities, including the potential reaction from the UAE.

Foreign Office censorship

Raymond also described meetings in which Foreign Office officials discussed limits on public warnings from civil society groups. NGOs were reportedly cautioned against repeatedly issuing alerts about the fall of El-Fasher, to avoid diminishing credibility.

He said the FCDO interpreted its obligations under a UN Security Council resolution narrowly, limiting additional action against the RSF’s external backers.

RSF operations briefly paused following the adoption of a UN Security Council resolution demanding an end to the siege in 2024. He said sources indicated that RSF leadership considered whether international consequences would follow.

However, once it became clear that no meaningful consequences were expected, Raymond said operations resumed.

Limits of intelligence without political action

Raymond concluded that while advanced intelligence and satellite analysis can provide early warning, they do not substitute for political will. He told MPs that the El-Fasher case demonstrates how timely intelligence alone is insufficient without decisive governmental action.

The period covered by his testimony spans the final months of the Sunak government and the early months of the Starmer administration. The relevant foreign secretaries during this period included Lord David Cameron, David Lammy, and Yvette Cooper.