Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Netanyahu-Trump Relations Reach Breaking Point: Israeli Media

Wednesday, 17 June 2026 9:39 AM

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel (L) and US President Donald J. Trump at the White House in 2020. (Photo by New York Times)

Relations between Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump have entered a critical phase and may soon escalate into open political confrontation after the announcement of the Iran-US MoU to end the war, according to Israeli media.

A report by Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth cited growing frustration on Trump’s part regarding Netanyahu’s performance and approach, stemming from disagreements over war management and regional affairs.

The US administration has reportedly concluded that assessments provided by Israel regarding the course of the war have not aligned with realities on the ground.

According to the report, the tension between Trump and Netanyahu intensified following certain Israeli assaults on Lebanon.

The US president has come to believe that Netanyahu shows little inclination toward reaching a political compromise or bringing an end to the confrontations.

The US reportedly rejected an official Israeli request to review the MoU, leaving Israeli officials unaware of the agreement's full details.

Channel 12 correspondent Yaron Avraham reported that the request was formally submitted and denied. Netanyahu himself acknowledged during a Monday press conference that he was "not sure about the details" of the MoU.

White House rejects Israeli request to 'review' Iran-US MoU: Reports

The US has rejected an "official Israeli request to review" the newly announced MoU between Washington and Tehran, according to reports.

Israel has reportedly informed the US that it does not consider itself bound by the agreement with Iran.

“The agreement with Iran was made by Trump, and this is his decision; we have our own interests,” Netanyahu said in a statement on Monday, vowing that Israeli troops would not withdraw from Lebanon and that the fight against Iran is “not over.”

Since the MoU was announced two days ago, the Israeli regime has violated the ceasefire in southern Lebanon 84 times, continuing its “crimes and massacres” against the Lebanese people, according to Iranian military sources.

At least four Israeli drone strikes targeted the southern Lebanese town of Mayfadoun on Tuesday afternoon, following heavy artillery bombardments in other areas.

Trump has publicly criticized Netanyahu's judgment, particularly regarding Israeli strikes on Lebanon. Speaking at the G7 summit, Trump stated: "Without the United States, there would be no Israel. Without me, there would be no Israel". He warned that "Bibi has to be more responsible with respect to Lebanon".

According to Axios, Trump expressed fury over an Israeli strike on Beirut conducted shortly before the US-Iran deal was to be signed, reportedly telling advisers: "Why did Bibi have to do a fcking attack? I was so pssed off. He has no f*cking judgement."

The US president has also suggested Syria under former Daesh and al-Qaeda deputy Abu Muhammad al-Jolani could handle Lebanon "if Israel can't do the job without killing everyone else".

Israeli analysts have characterized the situation as a strategic failure for Netanyahu. Haaretz columnist Yossi Verter described Netanyahu as standing at the "height of what any objective expert would define as a colossal strategic failure" for Israel.

Maariv columnist Ben Caspit wrote that Trump "threw him under the bus". Walla news commentator Barak Seri called it Netanyahu's "greatest humiliation".

Sudan’s Young Women Return to International Soccer as War and Taboos Linger

Sudan's U-17 women's national team players, in red, defend the ball during a soccer

By Africa News

Sudan

Their red jerseys stood out against the green pitch. Most were teenage girls. Some had fled war. Others had never played in an organized soccer league or set foot in a major stadium before.

Yet when they took the field at Larbi Zaouli Stadium in Casablanca, Morocco, they marked Sudan’s first appearance in international women’s soccer since a civil war erupted in a country where women’s participation in sports has long been controversial.

“My goal is to lift up soccer in my country,” Nura Mohamed, the 17-year-old team captain, told The Associated Press.

“It’s a beautiful, unique feeling because, at the end of the day, I just love playing.”

Sudan’s under-17 women’s national team traveled to Morocco last week for qualifying matches on the road to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. The inexperienced squad suffered heavy defeats against Comoros, conceding 30 goals in two matches.

Many of the players broke down in tears after the final whistle in front of a dozen cheering fans.

They faced an older, fitter, and more experienced opponent. Unable to assemble a senior women’s squad in time, Sudan’s soccer federation entered a younger team to avoid forfeiting its place in the qualifiers. They only started training weeks ago.

“The difference between us and the others is huge. We cannot yet compete at the highest level," Burhan Tia, a veteran Sudanese soccer coach who oversees all of Sudan’s women’s national teams, said after the first match, a 17–0 defeat.

“Comoros has many players competing in Europe, our team is mainly made up of schoolgirls."

This team represents hope for Sudan's future

Sudan’s women’s soccer collapsed when civil war erupted in 2023. For federation officials, debuting this young squad in Casablanca after years of conflict marks an important step in keeping women's soccer alive in Sudan.

“Some traveled long distances just to attend training. Many are separated from their families, yet they continue to work hard and pursue their dream," Manal Ali Bushra, a businesswoman who heads the women’s soccer committee, told the AP.

To support that vision, Ali Bushra said the federation is working on infrastructure projects, including a planned sports city and the renovation of key stadiums in safer parts of the country. She declined to answer questions about the women’s program budget and funds.

Tia knew the magnitude of the challenge when he accepted the job of rebuilding a shattered team.

“First, I had to find girls who played soccer. Then, once I found girls who played, I had to make sure they were the right age,” he said. “Then I needed to convince their parents to let them miss classes for training.”

With the league suspended, his scouting trips took him to schools across Sudan and to neighboring Egypt, where many families had fled the war. He recruited 10 players from teams and academies in Cairo, with the rest drawn from Sudanese cities.

Tia would have liked to recruit from conflict-hit areas like Darfur or Kordofan, a region known for producing Sudan’s top athletes. But many girls had lost their identification documents, making it impossible to verify their ages under international regulations.

The war has also shattered transportation, turning journeys between cities that once took hours into perilous trips lasting days.

On the field, the players’ lack of experience was evident. Several struggled with basic positioning, failing to hold the offside line or maintain tactical discipline. Throughout the matches, they repeatedly looked to the sidelines for instructions from the coach and his assistant.

Facing war, fatwas and conservatism

The United Nations has described the war in Sudan as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. It began in 2023 when a power struggle between the military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces erupted into fighting marked by mass killings, rape and ethnic violence. More than 40,000 people have been killed, according to U.N. figures, and over 14 million have been displaced, with famine and disease spreading across parts of the country.

The war halted every sports activity, including the women’s soccer league, which was officially established after the 2019 progressive revolution that ousted President Omar al-Bashir. His three-decade Islamist rule was marked by Public Order Laws that rights groups said restricted women’s freedoms. Even after the revolution, prominent Sudanese preacher Abdulhay Yousif said the establishment of a women’s football league was aimed at undermining religion.

“The idea of women running, jumping, sweating, and even something as simple as their bodies being visible in motion, was seen by Bashir’s Islamist regime as producing fitna, which in a Sudanese context was understood as sexual or moral chaos,” Liv Tønnessen, a political scientist researching gender politics in Sudan, told the AP.

“So when women step onto a soccer pitch, they are directly confronting that entire logic. They are not just present in a male-dominated sports arena, they are moving freely in it, on their own terms,” Tønnessen, a former guest researcher in a women-only university in Sudan, added.

Beyond institutional hurdles, players also faced a wave of sexist abuse online. On the national team’s social media accounts, many commenters mocked them for big defeats. Others posted the phrase “go back to the kitchen,” in multiple languages.

Ghana's Thomas Partey Loses Bid to Enter Canada for World Cup

Ex-Arsenal footballer Thomas Partey arrives at Westminster Magistrates' Court where he is charged with five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault, Aug. 5, 2025

By Africa News

Canada

Ghana midfielder Thomas Partey has lost a court challenge to allow him to enter Canada for his team's World Cup opener in Toronto.

Ottawa denied Partey's visa over seven charges of rape and one count of sexual assault brought against him in Britain.

Accra requested an injunction to set aside the decision but it was denied by a federal judge on Tuesday.

Ghana's foreign minister called the ruling "high-handed and extremely unfair." Accra has sent an official "note of protest" to Ottawa, formally asking for the decision to be reviewed.

Canada's foreign ministry told AFP that it "maintains regular diplomatic engagement with Ghana, including on consular and migration-related issues when they arise."

But the ministry declined comment on discussions with Ghana about Partey's exclusion and said decisions on entering the country are made by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).

IRCC said "Canada has been consistent that hosting major events does not change Canada's immigration laws."

"Every person seeking to come to Canada is assessed individually, based on the facts available and the law that applies," it added in a statement.

The Black Stars will play Panama on Thursday.

Shortly before the decision was handed down, Ghana's veteran coach Carlos Queiroz told reporters in Toronto that his side would be ready, regardless of the court outcome.

"My business is to play with the cards that I have in front of me," Queiroz said."When the decision comes, we are ready."

Panama head coach Thomas Christiansen, also asked about Partey's possible exclusion, said he believed Ghana would pose strong competition even if the former Arsenal player was not on the pitch.

"They have a lot of other footballers who can take on his role," he said in Spanish.Ghana would not be "weaker" because Partey was absent, he added.

"They have a lot more experience than we have," Christiansen said of the Black Stars.

The charges against Partey relate to allegations by four different women between 2020 and 2022. He has pleaded not guilty to all the charges.

Tunisia Repatriates Nearly 100 Sub-Saharan Migrants in 'Voluntary Return'

Some 91 migrants line up to leave Tunisia as authorities repatriate nearly 100 people from sub-Saharan Africa under a voluntary return programme.

By Africa News

Tunisia

Tunisian authorities repatriated nearly a hundred migrants from sub-Saharan Africa on Tuesday under a so-called "voluntary return" initiative that has involved almost 5,000 people over the past year, Tunisia's national guard said.

With their backpacks and suitcases, dozens of individuals -- mostly young men, their faces covered in black masks, alongside a number of women and children -- were photographed by AFP at the Tunis-Carthage airport.

A total of 91 irregular migrants left Tuesday, headed to multiple sub-Saharan countries, national guard spokesman Houcem Eddine Jebabli told AFP, lauding the strength of a programme launched last July.

He said the government initiative "takes into account humanitarian and social aspects alongside judicial and security constraints", adding that "so far close to 5,000 people" have participated in the programme.

The rate of returns has intensified recently, with flights increasing in frequency from once a month to "near-daily dedicated flights", Jebabli added. The initiative is separate from the International Organization for Migration's own voluntary return scheme, which Jebabli said "secured the return of 27,000 people in three years".

Under the government initiative, a campaign has been launched to encourage migrants to come forward "via a toll-free number or the numbers of officials at the voluntary return camp", Jebabli said. AFP was not able to speak with the departing migrants on Tuesday, but humanitarian sources have recently denounced a campaign of arbitrary arrests of migrants who have been taken into buses to unknown locations.

According to Jebabli, the voluntary return camp in question, where the migrants' identities are verified, is situated north of Tunisia's second city of Sfax. Rights groups had in 2023 reported that an estimated 25,000 migrants had gathered in camps in that region under poor, unsanitary conditions after they were driven out of major cities.

In February of that year, President Kais Saied said "hordes of illegal sub-Saharan migrants" posed a demographic threat to the Arab-majority country. Saied's speech triggered a series of racially motivated attacks as thousands of sub-Saharan African migrants in Tunisia were pushed out of their homes and jobs.

Alongside neighbouring Libya, Tunisia had been a key departure point for migrants seeking to make the perilous journey across the Mediterranean in search of better lives in Europe. Amid efforts to curb arrivals to its southern shores, the European Union signed a 255-million-euro ($300 million) deal with Tunis in the summer of 2023.

Temporary Shelter Becomes Home for Migrants Fleeing Unrest in South Africa

Jaco Marais

By Africa News

Immigration

Displaced Malawians are being moved from a temporary shelter in Durban following a recent wave of anti-immigrant unrest in South Africa, with some migrants choosing to return home amid growing fears for their safety.

In recent weeks, groups carrying sticks, whips and shields have marched through communities demanding that undocumented foreigners leave the country by June 30. The demonstrations have heightened concerns among migrant communities, many of whom say they no longer feel secure.

"Because of xenophobia, I am going back to my country," said Malawian migrant Martha Kennedy as she prepared to leave South Africa.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has appealed to South Africans not to blame migrants for the country's economic and social challenges, warning against hostility toward foreign nationals.

However, conditions at temporary shelters have become increasingly difficult. "There is some frustration as you see they have been here for so many days," said Lazarus Soda, another Malawian migrant. "Life is too hard out here. In terms of sanitation it's hard. There are some toilets, but it's not enough."

One of Africa's largest economies, South Africa has long attracted migrants from across the continent seeking work and better opportunities. According to the national statistics agency, more than three million foreign nationals live in the country, representing just over five percent of the population.

Rwanda Stepping Up Precautions Against Ebola, Health Minister Says

Sabin Nsanzimana, Rwandan Minister of Health

By Africa News and CGTN

One month into the latest Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, neighbouring Rwanda says it's taking "public health precautions," even though no cases have been detected within its borders.

The country's health minister says vigilance is key.

"The spread of this current outbreak came as a surprise when it was announced in mid-May. What worried most people was how such a large number of cases could have built up so quickly, when it should have been detected earlier."

Since the outbreak was declared , 808 cases have been confirmed in the DRC, including 192 deaths, according to the latest World Health Organization figures.

Neighbouring Uganda has seen 19 confirmed cases, including two deaths.

"At the moment, we can see things are moving in the right direction, even though it will still take some time in countries like Uganda, for example," Nsanzimana says.

"They’ve gone 10 days without a new case, which is reassuring, and in other parts of the DRC as well, we’re starting to see good results. But in Ituri, which is still the epicentre, there are still new cases every day."

Despite urgent efforts to limit the spread of the virus, officials from the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies on Tuesday joined a growing chorus of warnings over the swelling scale of the crisis in DR Congo especially.

"The peak is, I think, not beyond us, but in front of us," Bruno Michon, the IFRC's operations manager for the outbreak, told reporters in Geneva.

"We are afraid that this could last one year" before the epidemic is over, he said, speaking from Bunia, capital of the DRC's northeastern Ituri province, which is the outbreak's epicentre.

Rwanda can't afford to let down its guard, Nsanzimana says:

"The longer it takes with the virus present at our borders, the more it weighs on our economies and on our daily activities. Even if there is no Ebola in Rwanda, there are still cross-border activities. There are planes that land in Kigali and go on to Entebbe, with stopovers."

Aid workers say cuts to US funding have led to insufficient contact tracing and a shortage of protective equipment. The World Health Organization on Tuesday stressed that community engagement, access and trust are also essential to stop transmission.

Fear of Ebola Keeps Pregnant Women Away from Hospitals in DR Congo

By Agencies

Democratic Republic Of Congo

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Ebola outbreak is triggering a secondary health crisis as growing numbers of pregnant women avoid hospitals for fear of infection or being placed under observation.

At Bénédicte Clinic in Bunia, prenatal consultations have dropped dramatically. According to the clinic’s medical director, Dr. Sonny Mwembo, attendance has fallen from around 60 expectant mothers per month to just 10 since the outbreak began.

Among those staying away is 26-year-old Esther Lutula, who is expecting her second child. She says concerns about Ebola screening procedures have led her to suspend her prenatal care.

"I stopped going to prenatal consultations. I prefer to wait until the Ebola outbreak is under control. When someone arrives at the hospital with a temperature of 38 degrees Celsius or higher, they are placed under observation. That worries me, so I am waiting until the risk of infection decreases before resuming my medical visits."

Lutula's fears intensified after a relative died from the virus.

"My sister’s sister-in-law died on Sunday. She worked in a bakery, and we learned that she had died from Ebola. I was afraid to attend the funeral. My husband advised me to stay at home because pregnant women are particularly vulnerable to the disease."

One month after the outbreak was officially declared, health authorities have reported 782 confirmed cases and 181 deaths across the three affected provinces. The virus continues to spread rapidly in remote areas, where population movements make contact tracing more difficult.

Health professionals warn that avoiding medical care could have serious consequences for mothers and their babies. Dr. Sonny Mwembo, Medical Director, Bénédicte Clinic: "This recent decline in attendance at prenatal consultations is worrying. It could lead to more obstetric complications and, ultimately, an increase in maternal deaths as well as fetal and neonatal deaths."

Health authorities and humanitarian organizations are now working to reassure communities that preventive measures are in place at healthcare facilities, hoping to prevent the Ebola outbreak from causing a parallel maternal health crisis.

Equatorial Guinea Government Resigns After Failing to Meet Targets

Basillioh Rukanga

BBC

AFP via Getty Images Equatorial Guinea's Prime Minister Manuel Osa Nsue Nsua in a black suit and white shirt and tie.

Prime Minister Manuel Osa Nsue Nsua was appointed in 2024

Equatorial Guinea's government has resigned after failing to meet its objectives, Vice-President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue said.

Obiang, who is also the son of President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, said the prime minister had presented the resignation of all members of the government because it had barely reached 10% of its targets.

He did not specify the targets but a statement by the ruling party said the president had observed that the government fostered corruption and failed to diversify the economy.

President Obiang is the world's longest-serving leader who has ruled the oil-rich West African country since 1979 with a strong grip, while naming family members to key government roles.

The president appointed the outgoing government in 2024, with Manuel Osa Nsue Nsua as prime minister.

On Tuesday, the vice-president said the resignation was in line with "the principle that responsibility in public management must be accompanied by results".

"The degree of execution achieved is clearly insufficient in relation to the expectations and commitments undertaken," he posted on X.

In a statement on Facebook, the ruling Democratic ‌Party ⁠of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE) said the president was dissatisfied with the management of the outgoing government. A new government is expected to be appointed.

The statement further cited the misuse of state resources for personal interests and stagnation in the implementation of development projects.

The president also noted that the government had not implemented policies to diversify the economy especially in the agricultural sector, which would cut reliance on imported goods that can be produced locally.

Equatorial Guinea's economy is heavily reliant on petroleum, with oil and gas accounting for most of its exports and revenues.

In spite of its oil wealth, much of its 1.8m population has not benefitted, as poverty remains rampant. In recent years, the economy has been on a decline amid reduced production and demand for oil.

Ebola Outbreak Could Become Worst on Record, Africa C.D.C. Chief Warns

Health workers have warned that the outbreak, already one of the worst in decades, could take as long as a year to contain if infection rates do not flatten.

Treating a patient suspected of having Ebola at a hospital in Mongbwalu, Democratic Republic of Congo, last month.

By Zane Irwin, New York Times

June 16, 2026

Health officials on Tuesday warned that the Ebola outbreak in East Africa could significantly worsen, saying it could last as long as a year and infect thousands of people if current transmission rates go on unabated.

The outbreak is already one of the largest on record, and has spread most in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where distrust of the authorities and violence in eastern regions have hampered health workers’ ability to help people.

“If we don’t stop the outbreak very soon it will be worse than what we had in West Africa and eastern D.R.C.,” said Jean Kaseya, the director general of the Africa C.D.C., said on Tuesday at an emergency conference on Ebola for African leaders.

There have been more than 800 confirmed cases in this outbreak, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, and nearly 200 people killed. The worst recorded Ebola outbreak took place between 2014 and 2016 in West Africa and killed more than 11,000 people, according to the World Health Organization.

Dr. Kaseya’s remarks were echoed by other health officials and experts, who warned that health workers were already facing steep obstacles.

“We are running after the disease,” said Bruno Michon, who is managing the Ebola response in Congo for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

Mr. Michon said in a phone interview Tuesday that the outbreak would take months to contain, and potentially as long as a year if infection rates continue to rise. The disease has spread across the border from Congo into Uganda.

Officials said they were particularly concerned about this outbreak because it was spreading in an area where stigma and misinformation have pushed people away from treatment centers, and where public health measures have clashed with traditional burial practices.

African leaders have appealed for sustained help in combating the outbreak, including at the conference on Tuesday. “Delayed action can transform a localized outbreak into a regional and a global crisis,” President Cyril Ramaphosa told other leaders. “That is why our response must focus on breaking the transmission and stopping Ebola at its source.”

At the Group of 7 summit in France on Tuesday, leaders of the world’s wealthiest nations issued a joint statement calling for a “coordinated response” to contain the outbreak and provide humanitarian assistance.

Officials warn that current estimates of cases may significantly undercount the true toll.

Bundibugyo, the type of Ebola virus behind this outbreak, has no targeted vaccine or treatment available yet. Early surveillance and testing failed to identify it, delaying the response, experts say. Fighting among armed groups and military forces in eastern Congo has displaced millions of people, making it even harder to trace.

Ebola can cause organ failure and internal bleeding, according to the W.H.O. It spreads when people come into contact with the blood or other bodily fluids of infected individuals.

“The situation is further complicated by rumors,” said Alex Lock, a communications coordinator with I.F.R.C. based in Bunia, a city where the virus has spread. He said the organization has mobilized hundreds of volunteers to speak with community members door-to-door, urging people to seek medical help if they develop symptoms.

“People don’t want to go to the hospital,” Mr. Lock said, because many believe the disease is “injected” into patients in treatment wards set up by foreign aid organizations.

Funeral practices, health workers said, have also become a major point of friction between residents, who are accustomed to seeing and touching the bodies of loved ones before burial, and officials, who warn that contact with infected bodies can transmit the disease.

Following outrage from residents in affected communities seeking to carry out traditional burial practices, Mr. Michon said, his aid group has started using body bags with windows, “so that families can see the face of the deceased and begin the process of grieving.”

Despite efforts to build community trust, Mr. Michon said affected communities are experiencing “a mix of fear and pain.”

Still, he said, the group’s volunteers have faced fewer attacks in recent weeks from residents who are suspicious of their activities, and he is hopeful that the organization’s messaging will spread awareness.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Iran Held to Draw by New Zealand in World Cup Opener

Tuesday, 16 June 2026 4:21 AM

Iranian national team players celebrate after Ramin Rezaeian scores against New Zealand during their Group G match at the 2026 World Cup on June 16, 2026, at Los Angeles Stadium in Los Angeles, USA.

Iran's national football team began their 2026 World Cup campaign with a hard-fought 2-2 draw against New Zealand in their Group G opener on Tuesday.

The match, played at the Los Angeles Stadium, saw both sides share the spoils in a thrilling contest that kept fans on the edge of their seats until the final whistle.

New Zealand shocked Iran early, taking the lead in the 7th minute through Elijah Just. Iran responded in the 32nd minute when Ramin Rezaeian fired home to level the score.

Just struck again for New Zealand in the 55th minute to restore the All Whites' lead, but Iran equalized once more in the 64th minute, with Mohammad Mohebbi finishing from a Rezaeian assist.

Iran also had a goal disallowed for offside during the contest.

FIFA named Ramin Rezaeian the Man of the Match, recognizing his pivotal role not only in scoring but also in setting up Mohebi's goal with a precise assist.

Mexican referee Cesar Ramos, a seasoned official with prior World Cup experience, took charge of the match, which was played in front of a staggering crowd of 70,108 spectators. Over 90 percent of the attendees were Iranian supporters, creating an electric atmosphere in the stands.

In the other Group G fixture, Egypt and Belgium played out a 1-1 draw, leaving all four teams level on points heading into the next round of matches.

Vandals Damage Work by Black Artist at Houston Museum, Officials Say

Two men scraped and punctured a $23,000 painting at the Houston Museum of African American Culture last month, the museum said. It decided to display the damaged artwork.

A large painting of a Black man with green skin and an American flag draped over his head. There is a hole in the right side of the painting.

By Derrick Bryson Taylor

Published June 13, 2026

June 14, 2026

A painting of a Black man with an American flag draped over his head at the Houston Museum of African American Culture was intentionally damaged last month, museum officials announced this week.

The painting, “Man in the Garden,” was part of a 10-week exhibition called “Eden” by the artist Clarence Heyward. The show, which depicted Black figures with green skin, explored themes of identity, environment and self-definition through “striking portraiture and layered symbolism.” It closed on June 6.

According to John Guess Jr., the museum’s chief executive emeritus and exhibition curator, the episode occurred on May 21 when two young white men dressed in black and carrying a bag entered the museum.

“They took something like a screwdriver or some scissors, and they scraped across part of the painting, and put a hole” in it, Guess said in a phone interview, estimating the damage at about $4,500.

The piece, which measures 4 feet by 4 feet, is valued at $23,000.

Heyward said in a statement to The New York Times that he was disappointed to learn the work had been damaged but was more interested in what that act revealed.

“Art has long been a space where social tensions become visible, and moments like this raise important questions about why certain images, narratives and perspectives provoke strong reactions,” he said. “The physical object was harmed, but the ideas at the center of the work remain intact.”

Before damaging Heyward’s painting, Guess said, the men had visited another exhibition at the museum, of work by the artist Kandy G. Lopez, who is also Black. There, they asked someone to take a picture of them giving the middle finger to one of Lopez’s works.

“These guys came in to do damage to a place that recognizes Black achievement and accomplishment but that also serves as a place of dialogue for people,” Guess said. “I think that they didn’t want any part of dialogue.”

A spokeswoman for the Houston Police Department said a museum official had filed a report the day after the episode. The matter is being investigated, she said, and no arrests have been made.

Security cameras were not operating properly the day of the incident, Guess said, and the museum had put in a work order the day before to have them repaired.

Each year, more than 50,000 people visit the Houston Museum of African American Culture, where admission is free. The museum’s mission is to collect the material and intellectual culture of Africans and African Americans both in Houston and across the African diaspora.

During a news conference on Tuesday, Guess linked the vandalism to bigotry in Houston.

“If we’re honest about it, this is a very racist town,” he said. “This town itself has some serious issues. We’re demographically diverse, but we remain segregated.”

The museum initially removed the painting to have it repaired but later decided to display it — with the damage — on the last day of the exhibition.

“I was just reminded of Emmett Till’s mother saying, I want an open casket,” Guess said, referring to the 14-year-old boy whose murder became a rallying point for the civil rights movement. “We want people to know that this happens here.”

Derrick Bryson Taylor is a Times reporter covering breaking news in culture and the arts.

Black America Is Already In A Recession

By Candece Monteil 

National Urban League

02 PM EDT, Mon Jun 15, 2026

Marc H. Morial 

President and CEO

National Urban League

“Policy rollbacks that have removed protections and investments designed to support Black communities … is the regression, combined with economic indicators, particularly unemployment, that would qualify as recessionary if they were applied to the national economy.” — Monica Mitchell, Chief of Staff, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies

The revelation that the U.S. economy shed 92,000 jobs in February and now faces its highest unemployment rate in years has rattled economists, many of whom warn that the country may be on the brink of a recession.

For Black America, the recession has already arrived.

Even worse, the Black recession isn’t driven natural market cycles alone. It is the predictable outcome of the deliberate policy choices of the Trump administration —choices that have aggressively dismantled the very protections meant to advance equity and stabilize communities historically shut out of opportunity. Not only did the administration take a sledgehammer to federal diversity, equity, and inclusion programs on Day One, it has spent the last year slashing agencies that have long served as engines of mobility for Black workers, including the federal civil service. More than 327,000 federal jobs have been eliminated, not through attrition or organizational modernization, but through deliberate cuts that have eroded pathways to the middle class built through generations of civil‑rights gains.

At the same time, the administration has abandoned federal support for disadvantaged businesses. Critical institutions—among them the Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI) Fund and the Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA)—have been targeted for defunding or dismantling altogether. These programs have been lifelines, offering capital and technical assistance to Black entrepreneurs who face entrenched discrimination from traditional lenders. Removing them does not create a level playing field; it cements an unequal one.

The consequences are measurable and immediate. After reaching an all-time low during the Biden administration, the Black unemployment rate surged to 8.3% by November 2025 — the highest level since the pandemic — and remains more than twice the rate for white Americans. The Black homeownership rate fell to 43.9% in the first half of 2025, wiping out years of fragile progress and deepening a racial wealth gap that already stood among the most persistent in the country.

Even before the latest dismal jobs report, the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies had already declared 2025 “a regression and recession” for Black Americans. In its State of the Dream 2026 report, the authors wrote, “Instead of aggressive leadership in dismantling structures of racial inequality, we are witnessing regressive leadership that is slashing government employment and agencies designed to address predatory economic practices that disproportionately harm Black communities.” The report further notes that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act entrenched permanent tax cuts for high‑income households and corporations while reducing investment in poverty‑alleviating programs and leaving support for working families stagnant or shrinking.

Policy experts often refer to Black Americans as the “canary in the coal mine” — the first to feel the impact of economic stress. If that analogy holds, the warning is clear: a broader national recession is not far behind. But acknowledging that Black America is already in recession is not merely a prediction about the future; it is a call to confront what is unfolding in the present. The question now is whether policymakers will heed that warning — or continue to ignore the communities already bearing the brunt of the nation’s economic retreat.

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‘The Man of Dreams’

Arthur James, a history-making African American figure at the University

Campus Life & Athletics | June 15, 2026

John Trent

Arthur James, 1917, featured in The Pohob, Elko High School's yearbook.

Arthur James headshot on the right it reads: "Arthur James. He thinks too much. 'Sam.' Hobby-Drawing. Favorite saying-'Amen.'"

Perhaps part of the allure of the life of Arthur James is how that among the many notable figures in the history of the University of Nevada, Reno, he is part of a much smaller group who can say they were among the first to achieve something lasting – and were the first of more firsts to come.

James, who grew up in Elko and attended the University for three years, 1919-1922, is the earliest documented African American to play football at Nevada. A 6-foot-1, 195-pound tackle, James was a key contributor on some of the Wolf Pack’s earliest and most well-known teams that featured All-American back James “Rabbit” Bradshaw.

In 1919, as the “Corky” Courtright-coached “Sagebrush 11” demolished the University of the Pacific, 132-0, James’ hometown newspaper, the Elko Daily Free Press, reported that, “It was one of the best games ever held in Reno … Arthur James represented Elko on the winning team during the third quarter.”

During the 1921 football season, Bradshaw, the senior quarterback in Courtright’s single-wing offense, led the nation in rushing with 1,534 yards. And James, along with several others that included future Wolf Pack Hall of Fame member Chester Scranton, was credited for helping Bradshaw make such an unforgettable imprint on the nation.

Wrote the 1922 Artemisia about James, who was known around campus by the nickname “Sam” and his role during the ’21 season: “Sam has worked conscientiously for three years for the betterment of Nevada’s athletics. No end of credit is due James for the manner in which he has held down the tackle position. James has been a great factor in the determination of the yardage gained by Nevada.”

James was the forerunner for numerous African American sports figures at the University, including future NFL Hall of Famer Marion Motley, who along with Kenny Washington, Woody Strode and Bill Willis broke professional football’s color barrier in 1946, as well as Wolf Pack quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who after starring for the 49ers has become one of the leading figures for social justice throughout the nation and the world.

The life of Arthur James is about all of this, and a lot more. He was part of a notable African American family that settled in Elko hoping to find a better life as one of the family members battled illness. He was an award-winning story writer during his days as a student at Elko High School. He helped Jim “Jackrabbit” Bradshaw become the University’s first great, nationally recognized football player. His legacy today is one that reminds us that he was more than just a barrier-breaking football player.

Growing up in Nevada

SILAS JAMES WAS A RESPECTED FIGURE in Elko, and for good reason. For the final 22 years of his life, Silas, who had moved his young family from Schulenberg, Texas to the eastern Nevada town of Elko in 1907, was the janitor at Elko High School. He had worked as a carpenter for a time at the sprawling 1,280-acre Carville Ranch, located near Jiggs, Nevada in the Mound Valley. The Carville Ranch was one of the oldest ranches in all of Nevada, possessing water rights dating back to 1869. It was a home to E.P. Carville, the future Nevada governor and United States senator, and it was said that Silas knew E.P. Carville as Carville was growing up.

Eventually, Silas moved to Elko, where he became a janitor at the Western Pacific Depot. Then he moved on to custodial work, first at Elko’s grammar school, and then, in 1917, Silas began his career at Elko High School. Silas James was widely known as “a kindly man, who never drank or smoked. He was trustworthy and honest …. He was well-liked by the children who attended school.”

Perhaps this was why James’ family flourished the way it did. They had moved to Elko partly because of the health condition of Silas’ wife, Lola, or often referred to as Lulu, who had long suffered from lung problems with symptoms resembling tuberculosis. Silas believed that moving from the clinging humidity of southern Fayette County in Texas – about 95 miles west of Houston – to the higher, drier elevations out West, to Elko, Lola’s difficulties breathing would be lessened. The move did just that. And for the next 10 years Lola, who had married Silas in 1897 at age 18, enjoyed improved health. The couple brought three children with them to Elko: the oldest, Arthur Malcolm, was born on Christmas Day in 1898; daughter Annie Juanita, who was born in 1899, and son Alaric, who was born in 1903. The baby of the family, Vivian “Nevada” James, was born on Nov. 28, 1908 in Elko.

Vivian was called “Nevada” by her family because they believed her to be the “first Black child born in the state of Nevada,” which was not true. The Nevada Independent wrote in 2024 of the state’s early Black population that, “Virginia City was home to the first sizable Black population in Nevada. The 1859 discovery of the Comstock Lode — the largest silver strike in U.S. history — led to a population boom in Nevada, which up until then only had a few thousand inhabitants. Like other demographic groups, Black immigrants flocked from the north and south. By 1860, all of the 44 Black Americans in Nevada resided in the region, and by the 1870s, about 100 lived there, according to U.S. Census data.”

However, Vivian was among only a handful of Black children born in Elko during that time period. The Nevada connection was always important to the James family, with the family firmly believing that little Vivian was indeed special, so much so that they wrote of her, “She was deemed by citizens of the state as their little princess.”

The James children were notably talented. They were among the highest achievers of all of the school-going families of Elko. All four were church-going, musical, enjoyed reading, writing and drawing, and were all well on their way to seeking higher education. All four James children would attend either college or trade school following their time in Elko, with both Juanita and Vivian both becoming teachers who influenced countless lives in their classrooms.

Their home on 756 River Street was notable, too, in that Silas, first a renter, was able to purchase it and was its sole owner. Their home was located near a church, and as Elko, a railroad and ranching town, began to move into the 20th century with electricity coming to the town in 1913, the James family found themselves to be a well-known part of an otherwise almost all-white community.

Young Arthur excelled at school. As one of 10 seniors at Elko High School in 1916-1917, he was involved in numerous activities, including being part of the staff of the school newspaper, “The Senyer,” which was created by the senior English class.

Arthur, who was also a sports correspondent for the Elko Independent newspaper, delivering writeups of Elko track meets, handled the sporting section of “The Senyer,” along with classmate Billy Maye. He wrote many of the funny stories that were in the “Jokes” section of the publication, and supplied cartoons, which the Elko Daily Free Press noted, demonstrated the young man “has talent and throws a good pen.” “The paper,” The Daily Free Press concluded, “is a very creditable production and reflects great credit by its producers.”

Arthur’s writing earned him well-deserved kudos. His “Dead Man’s Grotto” story was entered in a statewide story contest, the Brown Memorial, and earned positive reviews: “One very interesting story deserving of special mention was ‘Dead Man’s Grotto,’ written by Arthur James of the Elko High School,” the Elko Independent reported in June 1917. “This story was the most artistic in description of them all. Its characters stood out most vividly. There was a charm in the grotesqueness of the plot, that makes its young author as a talented aspirant to literary fame.”

In the 1917 Elko High School yearbook, the Pohob, Arthur’s story, “The Man of Dreams,” was featured on Page 9. In it, Arthur wrote of adventure in Alaska and San Francisco, and how a group of fishermen come to some hard-earned wisdom through their experiences. Near the end of the story, a sightless man regains his sight, realizing that for all the great adventures a person might have in far-off, exotic locales like Alaska and San Francisco, perhaps the greatest adventure of them all is realizing that at the end of one’s travels, it is the familiar, and not the fantastical, that truly lend a life meaning.

“Suddenly his dim eyes rested on a mirror,” Arthur wrote in the story, “and with the agility of an athlete he dashed abruptly to the clear, crystal glass, shouting, ‘I am happy forever! There he is! There he is! That’s my Man of Dreams.’”

Within about a month in 1917, the family would celebrate and grieve, with Arthur’s graduation from Elko High on June 14, along with nine other members of the Class of 1917 (Class motto: “Not on the Heights, But Climbing”) at the Bradley Opera House, followed by Lulu’s passing at age 38 on July 16, 1917 from complications from her lung condition. It was a time that would see even more changes in 1918, as the United States was now fully involved in World War I. Arthur enlisted in the United States Army that fall and served as a private until the war’s conclusion.

By the fall of 1919, Arthur was among 22 students from Elko who were beginning their studies at the University of Nevada. It was the largest group of first-year students from any Nevada town outside of Reno. Not long after, Silas married again, to Mamie, or “Mayme,” L. Green, who had lived with her brother, Isham, a Western Union Telegraph messenger who was known to be “well-educated,” in Elko since 1915.

Football

THE FOOTBALL TEAMS OF COACH CORKY COURTRIGHT featured some of the most notable figures in Nevada history. The most well-known was “Jackrabbit” Bradshaw, a 5-foot-9, 135-pounder, who was, as his nickname suggested, as quick as a jackrabbit. Until the advent of Marion Motley nearly two decades later, Jimmy Bradshaw was the greatest football player to ever play for Nevada. Later, Bradshaw would become a great college coach at Fresno State.

Nevada was in a period of its most sustained football success to this point, with Courtright’s first team in 1919 finishing 8-1-1, and outscoring its opponents 450-32. The team’s single wing offense required good blocking, as well as ball awareness, with snaps often going to the quarterback of the formation, who might then feint handoffs or take the ball on a run himself. This was why players like the hard-hitting, heady Chester Scranton, who, like Arthur James, was from Elko, were so critical to the team’s success. Given how quickly the offense operated, it wasn’t surprising that a player like Arthur James would contribute.

Clipping of a yearbook from 1921 with Arthur's photo on the left and the following written on the right: "Arthur James .. Elko, Nev. Arts and Science. Football (2) (3), Class Football, basketball and Track (2)."

“Sam” James fit right in. He had run track at Elko and was the possessor of a championship-level broad jumping ability. He played tackle on both offense and defense in 1920 and 1921, and the team continued to win – the 1920 squad finished 7-3-1 and went 4-3-1 in 1921 as Bradshaw valiantly played through a senior season filled with injury. Arthur’s appearance in the 1922 Artemisia, listed among the members of Junior Class, noted that he was majoring in Arts and Science, that he had participated in football, as well as basketball and track. The Junior Class, in its introduction to that section noted that, “Entering in the Fall of 1919, our class was largely composed of men just out of service, men who whose trials and experiences had demonstrated the need for a better education.”

Family history

Over the next several years, the James children began to fan out throughout the country, mirroring the crest of the “great migration” that earlier in the 20th century saw hundreds of thousands of African Americans relocate from the South to cities in the West, Midwest, and East.

Alaric earned a degree in engineering from a Booker T. Washington School, with a focus on electricity, and moved to New York. He became a maintenance control supervisor for the U.S. Post Office. He passed away in June 1982 at age 79.

Vivian, “Nevada’s princess,” passed away on New Year’s Eve, 1999, at the age of 91. She was a teacher for more than four decades, working at schools in Texas, Kansas and Oklahoma City. Annie “Juanita” Keith Meeks passed away on June 28, 1997, at age 97 in Oklahoma City. Both sisters were pillars of their community in Oklahoma City. Juanita, long after she had retired from teaching, remained an active organizer in the Oklahoma City area of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority of Black female graduates of the University of Oklahoma.

All three children, along with Arthur, wrote a letter to Elko following the death of their stepmother, Mayme Lee James, in November 1943. Silas had passed away four years earlier, on Aug. 12, 1939. The home on River Street had caught fire in 1936, suffering major damage. Silas, with some great difficulty, had managed to extricate the family car, which was brand new, from the garage following the blaze. He was still serving as janitor at Elko High in spring 1939. But in late June, he suffered a fractured hip from a fall. He never fully recovered. The man who started out working on a ranch in Mound Valley and then roamed the halls of Elko High for more than two decades, always cleaning and engaging those he knew with good words and actions, was praised by those he worked with for his kind, gentle and reliable nature.

When Mayme died at age 63 in 1943, her stepchildren shared a “Card of Thanks” in the Elko Daily Free Press that appeared on Nov. 19, 1943. Although it was signed by all four of the James children, it’s difficult not to conjecture that Arthur played a prominent role in writing it. The language is very similar to the writing of a quarter century earlier, when the author of “The Man of Dreams” excelled in spinning stories that were well-written and was able to connect with the reader through a shared sense of humanity.

The “Card of Thanks” read in part:

“We extend our unadulterated thanks for the various deeds, comforting and sympathetic expressions and heed with propriety all courtesies afforded and extended. … Words are inadequate to convey and extend our sincere gratitude and appreciation … (for) your unusual kindness and genuine hospitality and services rendered … (You) leave an indelible impression that time itself cannot efface. May God bless you. Do remember us in your prayers.”

The James children’s coda to Elko noted that Arthur was living in San Francisco, which, not entirely uncoincidentally, was one of the exotic, foreign locales that he’d featured in “The Man of Dreams” in the Elko High yearbook in 1917. By the late 1920s, Arthur, who never graduated from the University and appears to have left Reno sometime following the completion of his junior year in 1922, had begun work as a longshoreman for the F.C. Gregory Waterfront Employers Association. Eventually, Arthur moved to Oakland, where he lived until his retirement in 1959. He then moved to Oklahoma City to be closer to his sisters. He lived his final years in a rest home in Oklahoma City. He died on July 6, 1968.

Three of the James children – Arthur, Juanita and the Nevada Princess, Vivian – are buried at Trice Hill Cemetery in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

Arthur Malcolm James’ headstone carries only a few words, each one somewhat solitary and carrying a solemn finality for a life that had many parts. His was a life that included a talented, accomplished family that was always there for one another; fanciful young writing dreams of what far-flung lives in places far, far away must be like; sturdy athletic play that was historically significant for the first university ever founded in Nevada as football’s first true star was introduced to the nation; and a wistful reminder that often when we have history within our midst, we often don’t realize it until it is too late.

“Jackrabbit” Bradshaw returned to his campus on many occasions throughout a long and storied and Hall of Fame life that saw him pass away in 1987 at age 89. “If there had ever been an all-time (Wolf Pack) team picked, (Bradshaw) would have been in the starting backfield,” the legendary Nevada State Journal managing editor and sports editor Ty Cobb said at the time. It would have been nice to know that at least at some point, one of the men who blocked for Bradshaw, Arthur M. James, could have made a similar return to the campus, where he could have been welcomed and congratulated for all he’d done.

Nevada's Man of Dreams

On Arthur’s headstone, followed by a cascade of veteran’s service wording – PRIVATE, ARMY – plus his birth and death, there is one word that actually leads off the entire retelling of his life. The single word that begins the headstone story of Arthur James reads, simply, proudly: NEVADA.

Arthur Malcolm James was much more than a first footnote in the University’s early history.

He was more than the first documented African-American to letter on a Nevada football team.

He was a Man of Dreams.

Nevada’s Man of Dreams.

(Author’s Note: All information including quotes contained in this story were taken from newspaper accounts in the Elko newspapers of the time, along with the Oklahoma City Daily Oklahoman, The Black Dispatch of Oklahoma, San Francisco Chronicle, Oakland Tribune, Mount Vernon (N.Y.) Argus, the Nevada State Journal, as well as Elko High School Yearbook Pohob, the University of Nevada Yearbook Artemisia and the Nevada Independent.)

Juneteenth Focus: Undergraduate Research Informs Local African American Historical Exhibits

Laine Kowalski, U of A Office of Research and Partnerships

One U of A history course partnered with the African American Museum of Southern Arizona, allowing undergraduate research to directly shape museum exhibits focused on African American history, culture and community in the region.

As the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences celebrates Juneteenth, we honor local history and the preservation of African American heritage in Southern Arizona. We are pleased to reshare a story originally published in February by the Office of Research and Partnerships highlighting a powerful SBS community partnership. Katherine Morrissey, professor in the Department of History, and her undergraduate students partnered with the African American Museum of Southern Arizona to work alongside museum leaders in developing exhibits that highlight Southern Arizona's Black heritage. Their efforts help preserve important local narratives and build up the historical record of African American contributions and influence in the region. We invite you to revisit this story below and explore the museum's programming. 

In 2022, Beverely Elliott found herself trying to answer a simple, yet pivotal, question that her grandson was determined to investigate. Assigned a Black History Month project for his first-grade class, he wanted to learn about someone local, someone integral to African American history and culture from Southern Arizona. Elliott, a retired educator, searched for resources throughout the state to guide him, coming up empty-handed. 

Her seven-year-old grandson, Jody, told her, “You should start a museum,” she recalled. 

Today, the now well-established African American Museum of Southern Arizona – cofounded by executive director Elliott and her husband – has collaborated with the U of A’s Department of History to give first-year college students the very opportunity her grandson sought to explore. 

Over the 2024 and 2025 fall semesters, museum staff worked closely with the university’s History 102 course, “Tucson Matters: Making History with Community Museums,” taught by history department head Katherine Morrissey. Students in the course conducted hands-on research to uncover and document historically overlooked African American histories and cultural contributions in Southern Arizona.

This research returns to the museum — expanding collections, informing new exhibits and strengthening Southern Arizona’s historical record of African American influence.

The “History Lab” – reconstructing the past in practice

History 102 is designed as an experiential general education course that enables first-year students, many of whom are not history majors, to actively engage with public history through academic research and community outreach. The course uses high-impact practices and civic engagement to immerse students in Tucson’s historical landscape, rather than formal lectures.

“When people think of undergraduate research, they often imagine hands-on work in a science laboratory,” Morrissey said. “In history, we approach research differently: the archives become our history lab, and so does the community, through oral histories and direct engagement with lived experience.”

Early in the semester, students step outside the classroom entirely. They visit museums, archives and community spaces across Tucson, including on-campus libraries and local institutions like the Arizona Historical Society. The class works directly with archivists and librarians at these sites, learning how to handle original documents, interpreting primary sources and navigating manuscript census records, maps and city directories, to practice the art of reconstructing the past.

During fall 2025, College of Social and Behavioral Sciences funds enabled students to travel to the Dunbar Pavilion, a sustained community site and cultural center located in a formerly segregated school for African Americans in Tucson.

“Students had the opportunity to actually walk into that space, be given a tour by someone who had graduated from the segregated school and look through their archives,” Morrissey said. “They had the experience of physically engaging in that history.”

History 102 students explore the AAMSAZ

Both semesters, students formed research groups focused on assigned topics in partnership with the museum aimed at developing under-researched areas of local African American history. The focus areas were informed by community members, who brought these missing pieces of African American history to Elliott’s attention.

The students conducted research on their assigned topics to fill these historical gaps and expand the museum’s knowledge base. Students performed archival research, analyzed photographs and artifacts, and carried out oral histories. They met regularly in the museum, located in the student union, developing their projects with input from museum leadership.

“At the end, students come back to present their research findings to us, the Arizona Historical Society and other town historians,” Elliott said. “Dr. Morrissey has done such a wonderful job with the students in presenting the information they learn back to us. Now, we can use their research and compile it into exhibits or collections to share with the public.”

Reshaping museum records through student research

One major student contribution helped inform a forthcoming exhibit centered on Cathay Williams, a formerly enslaved woman who disguised herself as a man to enlist in the U.S. Army and later served with the Buffalo Soldiers in the late 19th century. Student researchers examined military records and historical accounts to situate Williams’ life within Arizona history and broader narratives of African American military service. 

Music and social life emerged as another research focus through student work on the local Beau Brummel Club, a prominent African American social and entertainment venue. Students traced the club’s role as a cultural and musical hub, situating it within broader networks of African American entertainment, nightlife and community gathering spaces in Tucson. Their research connected local venues to broader trends in African American music and performance, helping the museum contextualize Tucson’s place within larger cultural movements.

Additionally, research on African American barbershops examined how these businesses functioned as economic anchors and informal community centers. Students reconstructed histories of individual barbers and shop locations from the 1880s to present day, using city directories and census data, contributing new insights into African American life in Southern Arizona.

“We even had one student who went out and got his hair cut at one of these barbershops to share in that real experience himself,” Morrissey said.

Another group focused on Green Book sites, documenting homes, businesses and restaurants that provided safe means of mobility and lodging for African American travelers during segregation. Research mapped Tucson’s participation in national travel networks. Tucson families also opened their homes to traveling African American athletes during this time. An oral history revealed how one local boy, Chester Willis, gave up his bed for visiting team players and even played catch with professional baseball pitcher Satchel Paige.

“This story caught the attention of one of my students, whose interest was in sports,” Morrissey said. “He followed the life of Chester Willis through the archives and learned that he was on Tucson High’s state championship basketball team in the 1960s. The student was able to trace Arizona’s struggle for public accommodation laws through the linked stories of Paige and Willis. His sports passion drew him into a topic he had known nothing about, but he was able to follow that history, link the past to the present and bring it back to the museum.”

Students also researched Mansfield Park, which was renamed to honor Doris J. Thompson, a local civil rights leader and community advocate. By tracing Thompson’s contributions and the public process behind the renaming, students used their historical scholarship to help inform contemporary civic decisions that commemorate Arizona’s past.

“This teaching approach also creates lifelong learners,” said director Nikieia Johnson. “Hands-on experiences resonate with students, and it introduced them to the museum as a space they can actively use and return to. These students intern with us and others continue to stop by in their free time.”

African American History Research as a Foundation for Broader Community Scholarship

As part of the University of Arizona’s role as a public, land-grant institution, History 102 is designed to train students to be historically well-rounded, civic participants. The course will rotate in future semesters to partner with other community museums, including the Mexican American Heritage and History Museum next fall. 

After future museum partnerships, History 102 is expected to return to the African American Museum of Southern Arizona as a primary research partner.

As the museum’s audience grows and student research generates new material for future exhibits, so too does its need for physical space, according to Elliott. She hopes to expand the museum’s presence on campus in the following years to accommodate continued momentum.

International African American Museum in South Carolina to Furlough All Its Staff

Decision comes as the museum in Charleston says it faces a ‘shift in the political and funding environment’

Adria R Walker

Mon 15 Jun 2026 16.04 EDT

The International African American Museum (IAAM) in Charleston, South Carolina, announced on Wednesday that, beginning in July and lasting through 31 December, all of its staff will be furloughed. The 20-daylong furlough will be staggered over the months and impact all levels of staff, including the museum’s leadership. The museum will remain fully operational, museum officials said.

The decision comes as the museum faces “financial pressure”, the IAAM said in a statement.

“We are navigating a shift in the political and funding environment that has made financial operations uniquely more challenging for our institution. This action is being taken to reduce expenses and avoid layoffs while we refocus on sustainable revenue growth and fundraising efforts,” the statement reads.

“We know this affects our employees and their families in real ways. Keeping this team together and supporting them through difficult times is why we chose this path rather than deeper cuts.”

The IAAM opened on 27 June 2023 in Charleston after two decades of planning. The museum sits on Gadsden’s Wharf, along the Cooper River waterfront, where about 40% of Africans who were trafficked in the Middle Passage and enslaved in the United States first landed in the country.

Earlier this year, the museum surpassed half a million visitors since its opening almost three years ago.

Monday, June 15, 2026

Global Outcry Grows as Gaza Aid Activists Detained in Libya Suffer

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: News websites

14 Jun 2026 22:57

Activists from multiple countries have launched a coordinated hunger strike and global protests after members of a Gaza-bound humanitarian convoy were detained in eastern Libya.

Dozens of activists from 13 countries, including Spain, have begun a global hunger strike calling for the immediate release of members of the Global Sumud North African Land Convoy. The group was detained in eastern Libya while en route to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza.

According to organizers, the detained activists have now gone 10 days without food or water and are being held in inhumane conditions inside undisclosed detention facilities.

In a press release, released on June 11, the Global Sumud Flotilla (GSF) expressed serious diplomatic and legal concerns after reports indicated that the detention of 10 humanitarian volunteers from the Global Sumud Land Convoy in Benghazi has been extended by an additional 30 days.

The volunteers are being held by the Eastern Internal Security Agency (ISA), a major security force operating under the de facto control of the Libyan Arab Armed Forces (LAAF) in eastern Libya.

"This is not a minor procedural matter. It is the continued detention of unarmed civilians, including medical doctors, who were part of a humanitarian mission to break the siege on Gaza and deliver aid to the Palestinian people. The use of opaque legal procedures to prolong their detention only deepens the political responsibility of those holding them," the press statement read.

Protest in Seville calls for immediate release

Speaking in Seville, Luis Reina of the Global Sumud Flotilla called for the immediate release of 10 Sumud convoy activists detained in eastern Libya while travelling to Gaza with humanitarian aid. He said their detention has been extended by 30 days and stressed that there is still very limited information about their condition. Reina urged Spanish authorities and the European Union to intervene without delay to secure their return.

“We are deeply concerned, as they have been detained for over two weeks in critical [sic] conditions; We condemn the absolute silence and inaction of our governments and demand their immediate release," said Maria Angeles Verede, Women in Black for Justice in War.

Global solidarity movement expands

The mobilization has grown across five continents, with solidarity actions reported in countries including Canada, the United States, Italy, South Africa, and Spain.

Demonstrations have also been announced outside Libyan embassies and foreign ministries, with calls for urgent diplomatic intervention to secure the activists’ release.

Jim Corralejo of the NGO “From Gaza to the World” warned that activists detained in Libya are now facing serious danger after spending 10 days on a hunger and thirst strike. He said they were part of a humanitarian convoy supporting Palestinians in Gaza, which is subjected to genocide under the Israeli Zionist regime.

Allegations against Eastern Libyan authorities and convoy account

Organizers accuse Eastern Libyan authorities of carrying out a wider crackdown on pro-Palestine activism.

Spanish activist Daniel Lobato of The Land Convoy in Libya said external forces are playing a significant role in shaping political dynamics in the region amid continued instability.

He explained that the convoy’s aim was to break the blockade and reach Gaza via North Africa and Egypt, but said it encountered obstruction in eastern Libya.

Lobato added that he participated in negotiations in Sirte to secure safe passage under international law, but said the convoy was ultimately blocked and members were detained in Benghazi under harsh conditions. He reiterated calls for their immediate release and for safe passage to Gaza.

International law claims and closing statements

From Seville, the protest also highlights the detention of Sumud Flotilla activists in Libya, which organizers describe as the criminalization of solidarity activism with Palestine.

They reiterated that the detainees have been on a hunger and thirst strike for 10 days under inhumane conditions and condemned the inaction of Western governments in response to the detention of their nationals.

DRC Displacement Camps Struggle to Contain Ebola Outbreak

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Reuters

14 Jun 2026 20:11

Health authorities in eastern DRC are losing ground against an Ebola outbreak in overcrowded displacement camps.

Health authorities in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo are losing ground in their effort to contain an Ebola outbreak that has reached overcrowded displacement camps, as deep-seated distrust of government and aid workers renders contact tracing nearly impossible and leaves tens of thousands of displaced people exposed.

The breakdown is most acute in Kpangba, a camp of roughly 30,000 people in the Nizi health zone of Ituri province, where two women died of Ebola on May 31 and June 1.

When health teams from the provincial health ministry, the World Health Organization, and other aid agencies moved in to trace those who had been in contact with the deceased, residents drove them out, refusing to accept that the deaths were Ebola-related.

"Up to this day, we are not able to follow up on the contacts of these cases," Jean-Claude Lonzama, chief doctor for the Nizi health zone, told Reuters.

The failure to establish contact tracing in Kpangba has left health authorities unable to map transmission chains in a camp where sanitation infrastructure is critically inadequate, hundreds of residents share a single toilet, and open defecation is common.

A crisis across 22 camps

The problem extends far beyond one site. The Nizi health zone alone contains 22 displacement camps housing more than 81,000 people, the vast majority of them displaced by inter-ethnic violence in surrounding areas. Lonzama said that as of now, no preventive measures have been put in place across these sites beyond basic health messaging.

The outbreak, declared one month ago, has spread across three provinces, Ituri, North Kivu, and South Kivu, home to more than five million displaced people and all three scarred by decades of war. It is already among the largest Ebola outbreaks ever recorded.

Attacks on health facilities

Distrust has been compounding the crisis from the start. Several treatment facilities have come under attack from locals angered by restrictions on traditional burial practices or unconvinced that the disease is real.

The pattern echoes the 2018-2020 outbreak in the same region, during which attacks against health facilities killed more than 25 health workers.

Early breach

The situation in Kpangba was further set back by an early breach that authorities were unable to prevent. The first confirmed case, a 60-year-old woman, tested positive on May 30, but had already broken out of quarantine and could not be located before she died.

The deaths were not made public until a UN refugee agency report on June 12.

Health experts say the combination of active armed conflict, critical equipment shortages, and a population with generations of reason to distrust state institutions has placed the outlook for containment in serious doubt.

Somalian President Says 'Israel' is Exploiting Somaliland Dispute

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Agencies

14 Jun 2026 02:59

Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud says "Israel" is exploiting the dispute over Somaliland after recognizing the separatist government.

Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud has strongly criticized "Israel" for recognizing Somaliland as an independent state, accusing the Israeli regime of exploiting the longstanding dispute between Mogadishu and the separatist government.

Speaking to local broadcaster Dawan TV, Mohamud described the move as one of the darkest moments in Somalia’s modern history.

“Tel Aviv is taking advantage of the long-standing dispute between Mogadishu and Hargeisa,” he said.

Somalia rejects force, backs dialogue

The Somali president explained that his government considered different approaches to dealing with Somaliland but chose dialogue and persuasion rather than military action.

Mohamud said the process has taken more than three decades, but argued that peaceful engagement remained the most suitable option under the circumstances.

He reaffirmed Somalia’s position that Somaliland remains an integral part of the country and stressed that any recognition of the region undermines Somalia’s sovereignty and territorial unity.

Somalia reiterates support for Palestine

Mohamud also noted that Somalia has never established diplomatic relations with "Israel", adding that he views the Israeli occupation as an aggressor against the Palestinian people.

His remarks come months after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on December 26, 2025, that "Israel" would recognize Somaliland as an "independent state", 35 years after the separtist government declared independence from Somalia. Netanyahu framed the decision as consistent with the “spirit” of the US-brokered normalization talks, which normalized relations between the Israeli occupation and several Arab states in 2020.

Amid Regional Backlash, Somaliland to Open Embassy in al-Quds

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Agencies

14 Jun 2026 16:15

Somaliland’s president has arrived in occupied Palestine for talks with Israeli officials ahead of the planned opening of an embassy in al-Quds.

The regional president of the breakaway region of Somaliland, Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi, arrived in the occupied Palestinian territories on Sunday on an official visit to meet with Israeli officials.

"Today marks a historic milestone in our journey and the beginning of a new chapter in the relationship between Somaliland and Israel." Israeli President Isaac Herzog said.

This is the first visit of its kind by a Somaliland president and follows years of undisclosed contacts between the two sides.

The official opening of Somaliland’s embassy in occupied al-Quds is expected to take place on the second day of the visit.

'Flagrant violation' of international law

Nineteen Islamic countries condemned, in a joint statement, the region’s intention to open a  "purported embassy" in occupied al-Quds, calling it a "flagrant violation" of international law and international legitimacy resolutions.

It is worth noting that "Israel" officially recognized the so-called "Republic of Somaliland" as an "independent and sovereign state" in December of last year, prompting widespread condemnation from Arab, African, and international actors.

The growing rapprochement has drawn sharp criticism across the Arab world and from the Somali government, which maintains that Somaliland is an integral part of its territory and asserts that 'Israel" is violating Somalia’s sovereignty and undermining regional stability.

Somali president says 'Israel' is exploiting Somaliland dispute

Earlier today, Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud strongly criticized "Israel" for recognizing Somaliland as an "independent state", accusing the Israeli entity of exploiting the longstanding dispute between Mogadishu and the separatist government.

Speaking to local broadcaster Dawan TV, Mohamud described the move as one of the darkest moments in Somalia’s modern history.

“Tel Aviv is taking advantage of the long-standing dispute between Mogadishu and Hargeisa,” he said.

Somalia rejects force, backs dialogue

The Somali president explained that his government considered different approaches to dealing with Somaliland but chose dialogue and persuasion rather than military action.

Mohamud said the process has taken more than three decades, but argued that peaceful engagement remained the most suitable option under the circumstances.

He reaffirmed Somalia’s position that Somaliland remains an integral part of the country and stressed that any recognition of the region undermines Somalia’s sovereignty and territorial unity.

Somalia reiterates support for Palestine

Mohamud also noted that Somalia has never established diplomatic relations with "Israel", adding that he views the Israeli occupation as an aggressor against the Palestinian people.

The developments come months after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on December 26, 2025, that "Israel" would recognize Somaliland as an "independent state", 35 years after the separatist government declared independence from Somalia.

Netanyahu framed the decision as consistent with the “spirit” of the US-brokered normalization talks, which normalized relations between the Israeli occupation and several Arab states in 2020.

Tasnim Reveals Iran-US Understanding on Troops, Sanctions, Hormuz

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Tasnim News Agency

15 Jun 2026 22:41

Iran's Tasnim News Agency has revealed details of a memorandum of understanding with the US, including the withdrawal of US combat forces from around Iran within 30 days, a freeze on new sanctions, and the suspension of the agreement in case of aggression or assassination in Iran, the Resistance front, or Lebanon.

Iran's Tasnim News Agency, citing an informed source, has revealed details of a memorandum of understanding between Iran and the United States, including the withdrawal of US combat forces from around Iran within 30 days of a final agreement, a freeze on new US sanctions during negotiations, and the suspension of the memorandum in the event of any aggression or assassination in Iran, the Resistance front, or Lebanon.

The report comes after Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced early Monday that a "peace agreement" had been reached between the United States and the Islamic Republic of Iran following three months and sixteen days of intensive negotiations, confirming significant progress between Tehran and Washington on issues related to Lebanon.

US troop withdrawal and freeze on mutual actions

According to the informed source cited by Tasnim, the fate of US forces in the region has been determined under the joint Iran-US understanding.

Under Article 4 of the memorandum, US combat forces are required to withdraw from the vicinity of Iran 30 days after a final agreement.

Under Article 9 of the memorandum, no new US forces will be added to the region during the 60-day negotiation period aimed at reaching a final agreement. In return, Iran will not take any nuclear action during this period.

Sanctions relief mechanism

Regarding sanctions, the source explained that under Article 9, the United States has committed not to impose any new sanctions during the 60-day negotiation period.

Under Article 7, the US also commits to lifting primary and secondary sanctions, as well as UN Security Council and Board of Governors sanctions, following the conclusion of a final agreement.

Under Article 11, after the signing of the memorandum, waivers will be implemented for sanctions related to the sale of oil, petrochemicals and petroleum derivatives. These waivers will cover shipping, transportation, sales, insurance and financial transactions related to oil sales.

Nuclear talks and uranium enrichment

According to Article 8, over a period of 60 days, which is extendable, negotiations will be held on the nuclear file, including uranium enrichment and stored nuclear materials.

The informed source also revealed that the memorandum provides for the suspension of its implementation in the event of any aggression or assassination in Iran, the Resistance front, or Lebanon.

Article 13 of the memorandum states that in the event of any aggression or military operations such as assassinations in Iran or the Resistance front, including Lebanon, no negotiations on a final agreement will take place, and the implementation of the memorandum, including the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, will be suspended.

Last-minute amendments: Lebanese sovereignty and Hormuz navigation

Tasnim also reported earlier on Monday, citing an informed source, that "various challenges between Iran and the United States over the articles of the memorandum continued until the final minutes before the announcement."

The agency noted that among the changes made in the last two days and hours leading to the announcement was the addition of the phrase "guaranteeing sovereignty and respecting the territorial unity of Lebanon" to the first article of the memorandum, a phrase Trump had previously refused to include.

Among other final amendments, the phrase "management of maritime navigation services in the Strait of Hormuz" by Iran and Oman was added to Article 5, with an exception for collecting fees from ships transiting the strait for 60 days. Iran intends to collect service fees from ships after this specified period has elapsed.