Monday, May 25, 2026

African Liberation Day: Has the Continent Truly Been Freed?

Abdelazim Allahgabo

May 23, 2026

May 25 marks African Liberation Day, a moment when the peoples of Africa commemorate a long history of resistance against colonialism, discrimination, and exploitation. It is a day that recalls how African leaders in the 1960s united around the vision of building an independent continent capable of controlling its own political and economic destiny, free from the foreign domination that drained its resources for decades.

Yet today, the meaning of liberation in Africa is no longer tied solely to the departure of the traditional colonial power. The concept has become far more complex in light of new forms of influence, political interference, military involvement, and economic dependency that continue to shape the fate of many African states, either directly or indirectly.

Although decades have passed since most African nations gained formal independence, the continent continues to struggle with chronic crises, including civil wars, coups, foreign intervention, poverty, institutional fragility, and conflicts driven by resources and geopolitical competition.

As a result, discussing African liberation today is no longer merely an exercise in remembering the past; it has become a call to redefine the meaning of genuine independence and to construct a new African project based on sovereignty, regional cooperation, and the protection of peoples from exploitation and conflict.

At the center of these challenges stands Sudan, which in recent years has become one of the continent’s gravest humanitarian and political tragedies. A devastating war has claimed thousands of lives and pushed millions into displacement, hunger, and collapse.

This year’s African Liberation Day arrives as Sudanese citizens confront painful questions about the role of Africa and its institutions in ending the war, protecting civilians, and preventing the country from descending further into fragmentation and state failure.

Liberation from Neo-Colonialism

When African peoples fought against European colonialism, the battle was clearly defined: direct occupation, military domination, resource extraction, and political and cultural control. Today, however, the mechanisms of domination have become more sophisticated and less visible.

Many African states now find themselves subject to economic, political, and security pressures that leave national decision-making constrained by external interests or regional alliances that often override the will of their populations.

Wars in Africa are no longer purely domestic conflicts. In many cases, they have evolved into extensions of broader struggles over influence and strategic interests, where armed groups and political or ethnic divisions are exploited as instruments to weaken states and exhaust their resources.

At the same time, continued economic dependency and the absence of sustainable development have prevented many African countries from achieving full sovereignty despite decades of formal independence.

Africa therefore requires a new wave of liberation — not from conventional military occupation, but from political and economic dependency and from interventions that fuel wars and obstruct stability.

The continent also needs stronger cooperation among its states based on shared interests and mutual respect for sovereignty, rather than allowing internal crises to become arenas for external competition and interference.

Sudan: The War That Exposed African Contradictions

In Sudan, the crisis appears particularly painful and complex. Since the outbreak of war between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces, the country has descended into one of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters.

Cities and infrastructure have been devastated, essential services have collapsed, and millions of civilians have found themselves trapped between displacement, hunger, and fear.

Yet Sudan’s tragedy is not solely the product of internal conflict. International reports, human rights organizations, and global media outlets have repeatedly pointed to regional and African actors that have contributed — directly or indirectly — to the continuation of the war through political, logistical, or military support, further complicating the crisis and prolonging its duration.

African states should have concentrated their efforts on ending the war and supporting political and humanitarian solutions, rather than allowing some parties to become part of the problem itself.

Many Sudanese expected a stronger and more principled position from the African continent, especially given Sudan’s historical role in supporting liberation movements and African causes over decades. Instead, the reality has revealed weak continental solidarity and the inability of regional institutions to respond decisively to one of the most dangerous crises Africa faces today.

The Sudanese conflict has become a stark example of the dangers posed by proxy wars and external interference within Africa. The suffering of civilians has often appeared secondary to political calculations and regional interests, while the Sudanese people continue to pay the price of a war threatening their future, national unity, and social stability.

African Union and the Responsibility to Reclaim Its Role

Today, the African Union faces a defining test in Sudan and across the continent more broadly. The institution, established to strengthen African unity and safeguard peace and stability, must free itself from the influence of competing state interests that weaken its decisions and limit its ability to intervene effectively during crises.

The African Union must regain the independence of its political decision-making and evolve from an institution that merely issues statements into one capable of exerting real pressure, mediating conflicts, and shaping solutions.

Africa cannot continue speaking about liberation and unity while remaining unable to stop wars, protect civilians, or prevent interventions that contribute to the collapse of states.

African Liberation Day will remain more than a symbolic historical anniversary only if Africa confronts its crises with honesty and courage and succeeds in building a genuine project grounded in independence, development, and peace.

Sudan today represents one of the continent’s most significant tests: either Africa succeeds in helping save its people and restore stability, or the rhetoric of liberation will remain little more than ceremonial language repeated each year while wars and divisions continue tearing African societies apart.

*The views presented in this article are the authors’ own and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Diplomatic Insight.

Abdelazim Allahgabo

Abdelazim Allahgabo is a multimedia journalist, TV correspondent, and editorial columnist. A creative professional with a diverse skill set, he is also an experienced voiceover artist, photographer, and designer. Abdelazim focuses on covering Sudanese affairs, blending his journalistic reporting with a sharp perspective in his editorial writing.

Ghana Accepts Yet Another IMF Restructuring Plan 

25 May 2026

Ghanaian Times (Accra)

By JULIUS YAO PETETSI

President John Dramani Mahama over the weekend took his Resetting Ghana Tour to the Savannah Region, where he expressed the hope that it would be the last time Ghana would seek a bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

He stated that the country must be able to manage its affairs prudently to avoid repeatedly going "cap in hand" to seek external financial assistance.

The President made these remarks at a town hall meeting in Bole on Saturday as part of his two-day tour of the region.

According to him, Ghana's economy is currently expanding at a fast rate, and efforts must be made to sustain the momentum following the conclusion of a three-year Extended Credit Facility programme with the IMF.

In that regard, President Mahama said his administration was implementing the necessary economic reforms to consolidate the gains made since he assumed office in 2025.

As part of the tour, the President cut the sod for the construction of the Bole College of Education and a 24-hour economy market in Bole.

The college, with a projected capacity of 1,500 students, is expected to improve access to teacher training and higher education in the region.

He described the project as a long-awaited dream, noting that it had been conceived during his time as Member of Parliament for Bole-Bamboi.

President Mahama also announced plans to establish a Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Centre of Excellence in Sawla to boost technical education in the area.

He explained that the facility would provide opportunities for young people to acquire employable skills and transition into the world of work.

In addition, he cut the sod for the construction of the Busunu Girls' Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) Senior High School and revealed plans to establish a science and technology university in the region.

He indicated that the government intended to scale up technical and vocational education by prioritising the construction of more TVET institutions instead of conventional senior high schools, to better align education with job market demands.

On healthcare, the President said the ageing Bole District Hospital, built in the 1970s, would be replaced with a modern 150-bed facility to meet the growing health needs of the people.

He also inspected ongoing works at the Damango District Hospital, which is being upgraded into a regional hospital to serve as the main referral facility for the Savannah Region.

Additionally, President Mahama inaugurated an ICT centre at Damango and inspected road projects, including the Sawla-Wa and Bole-Tinga roads.

Read the original article on Ghanaian Times.

Malawians Face Endless Darkness As Power Crisis Deepens

24 May 2026

Nyasa Times (Leeds)

For many Malawians, electricity has become a privilege that appears without warning and disappears without apology.

In homes, children struggle to study for examinations under candlelight. In barber shops and small restaurants, business owners spend long hours staring at silent machines and empty customers' chairs. In hospitals, offices and factories, productivity slows each time the lights go out.

And now, the country has been told the painful truth: the blackouts are far from over.

Officials from the Electricity Generation Company (Egenco) on Friday admitted before the Parliamentary Committee on Government Assurances and Public Reforms that Malawi is producing far less electricity than the country needs, leaving the national grid under severe strain.

Led by Director of Planning Jeddie Luka and Company Secretary Videlia Mluwira, the officials painted a grim picture of a power system battling equipment breakdowns, fuel shortages, obsolete infrastructure and rapidly rising demand.

At the centre of the crisis are breakdowns at Nkula B and Kapichira II hydropower stations, which together have removed 52 megawatts (MW) from the national grid. The situation has been worsened by foreign exchange shortages that have crippled Egenco's ability to buy spare parts for damaged equipment.

Out of 27 diesel-powered generators meant to cushion the country during power shortages, only 18 are currently working. The remaining nine have been grounded because spare parts cannot be procured in time, with some purchases delayed by procurement procedures and Anti-Corruption Bureau clearance requirements.

Fuel shortages have further paralysed electricity generation. Egenco says rationing has affected heavy-duty generators, leading to another 53 MW loss from the grid. Altogether, more than 100 MW is currently unavailable for national supply.

But while supply continues to shrink, demand for electricity is growing at a speed the country is failing to match.

Luka told lawmakers that under the Malawi Electricity Access Project (MEAP), around 180,000 new customers were connected to the national grid without any significant increase in electricity generation. He warned that a planned Escom project to connect another 250,000 customers could worsen blackouts unless government urgently invests in generation capacity.

"The demand is increasing very fast while generation remains low," Luka said.

The consequences are already being felt across the country.

Small-scale businesses that depend on refrigeration, welding machines, internet services and electrical equipment are losing income daily. Families are spending more money on candles, charcoal and fuel for generators. Students preparing for national examinations are forced to revise in darkness.

Even those who own generators are struggling because diesel itself has become difficult to access.

Egenco spokesperson Moses Gwaza said the company hopes the situation may slightly improve in June when a new solar plant in Salima starts supplying 10 MW to the national grid. However, he admitted that forex shortages delayed payments to the contractor responsible for commissioning the project.

"We are also having challenges with fuel. We cannot run some of the diesel engines. So we are engaging Nocma, Puma and other suppliers to prioritise us in terms of fuel supplies," Gwaza explained.

Luka added that while solar energy offers hope, it cannot yet fully support heavy industrial operations that require stable and continuous electricity.

Meanwhile, rehabilitation works at Kapichira Dam -- heavily damaged by Cyclone Freddy in 2022 -- remain stalled by a $50 million (about K86 billion) funding gap. Government is still searching for financial support to complete the repairs.

Parliamentary Committee chairperson Sam Kawale said the country must move beyond talking and urgently increase power generation if Malawi is to escape the cycle of blackouts.

"The major thing is increase in generation. At the moment, we are not generating enough to meet current demand," Kawale said.

Consumers Association of Malawi (Cama) executive director John Kapito accused authorities of failing consumers for years despite countless complaints over unreliable electricity.

"Consumers have complained for ages and nothing has happened," Kapito said, warning that prolonged blackouts are crippling industries, destroying small businesses and undermining Malawi's development ambitions under Malawi 2063.

Energy expert Sugzo Kaunda from the Malawi University of Business and Applied Sciences said the country's electricity crisis is no longer temporary but structural, caused by failure to implement long-planned energy investments.

"We have a serious problem of accessing power in the country, characterised by blackouts," Kaunda said.

In April, Escom announced an eight-month embedded power and battery storage programme aimed at stabilising the national grid -- effectively confirming that Malawians may have to endure many more months of darkness before any meaningful improvement arrives.

Currently, Egenco is supplying only 444 MW to the national grid -- 390 MW from hydro power, 53 MW from diesel generators and just 1.3 MW from solar energy.

For millions of Malawians sitting in darkness night after night, that reality is no longer just about electricity.

It is about lost income, interrupted education, collapsing businesses and a growing fear that the country's future is being dimmed together with the lights.

Read the original article on Nyasa Times.

Senegal's President Sacks PM, Dissolves Government After Months of Tension

Senegalese President Bassirou Diomaye Faye

23 May 2026

Premium Times (Abuja)

By Beloved John

Mr Sonko believed that President Faye was drifting away from the party's original agenda and had previously threatened to pull PASTEF out of government and return to the opposition.

Senegal President Bassirou Faye has sacked Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko and dissolved the government following months of tensions and a burgeoning economic crisis.

This was announced in a televised address on Friday by presidential aide Oumar Ba, who accused Mr Sonko of excessive personalisation.

Mr Ba, who read a presidential decree on television, did not give any information on the appointment of a new prime minister or what is supposed to follow the development.

"Faye has ended the duties of Ousmane Sonko... and consequently those of the ministers and secretaries of state who are members of the government," he said.

Friction between the two political allies had emerged over an increasingly visible power struggle within Senegal's ruling Patriotes Africains du Sénégal pour le Travail, l'éthique et la Fraternité (PASTEF) party, with tensions centring on who truly controlled the government, disagreements over economic policy, and IMF negotiations.

Mr Sonko believed that President Faye was drifting away from the party's original agenda and had previously threatened to pull PASTEF out of government and return to the opposition.

The country's debt crisis and ongoing negotiations with the IMF also contributed to the crisis. The talks followed the IMF's suspension of its $1.8 billion lending programme after authorities uncovered previously misreported debt figures in 2024.

The suspension had raised the country's end-2024 debt burden to 132 per cent of GDP.

Before the dismissal of Mr Sonko and all the ministers, the Finance Minister, Cheikh Diba, had told parliament that talks with the IMF are expected to resume in June. He also noted that the government hoped to reach an agreement on key points by 30 June.

The minister also warned that the country's fuel subsidy bill could exceed its 2026 budget allocation by as much as 1.15 trillion CFA francs ($2 billion) if oil prices rise to $115 per barrel. However, Mr Sonko had previously rejected his request to raise fuel prices.

Following the announcement, Mr Sonko, in a post on Facebook, said, "Alhamdulillah (praise be to God). Tonight I will sleep soundly in the Keur Gorgui neighbourhood."

Meanwhile, the dissolution of the cabinet could affect Senegal's chances of reaching a new agreement with the IMF and reviving its economy.

They are both former tax officials who were jailed ahead of the 2024 election. Mr Sonko, a popular opposition leader during President Macky Sall's administration, had backed Mr Faye in the election after being barred from running in a 2024 defamation ruling.

He played a crucial role in Mr Faye's emergence as the president and was eventually appointed prime minister. With his dismissal from office, it remains unclear what his next move will be.

However, in March, the parliament approved electoral code changes that would allow him to run for president in 2029.

Read the original article on Premium Times.

Africa Has Seen This Before: Senegal's Young Revolutionaries Now Face the Old African Curse

Sud Quotidien, Ousmane Sonko/Page Facebook

Senegalese President H.E. Bassirou Diomaye Faye and Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko

24 May 2026

allAfrica.com

guest column

By Daniel T. Makokera

Africa has seen this before: The revolutionary brothers who once shared prison cells, campaign stages, liberation trenches and political slogans eventually arrive at the same destination: the brutal crossroads of power.

From Robert Mugabe and Emmerson Mnangagwa in Zimbabwe, to Salva Kiir and Riek Machar in South Sudan, to the dramatic fallout between Julius Malema and Floyd Shivambu inside South Africa's Economic Freedom Fighters, the continent's political history is littered with former allies who eventually discovered that defeating an old order is far easier than managing ambition within a new one.

Even Botswana — long regarded as Africa's model democracy — has not escaped the tensions of political succession. The once close relationship between former president Ian Khama and his successor Mokgweetsi Masisi deteriorated into one of the region's bitterest political feuds after disagreements over power, control of the ruling party and the future direction of the state.

South Africa itself offers another cautionary tale. Thabo Mbeki and Cyril Ramaphosa once stood side by side inside the African National Congress as part of the post-apartheid governing elite. Yet succession battles, factionalism and ideological tensions eventually transformed comradeship into political rivalry. Mbeki's eventual recall by his own movement revealed how liberation politics often devours its own architects.

Beyond Africa, the pattern repeats itself. In the United Kingdom, Tony Blair and his longtime Chancellor Gordon Brown governed together for years while quietly engaging in one of modern politics' most famous power struggles. And decades earlier in Burkina Faso, Thomas Sankara's revolutionary government ended in tragedy when his close ally Blaise Compaoré overthrew him in the coup that led to Sankara's assassination.

The lesson from all these examples is uncomfortable but undeniable: revolutions are usually united in opposition, but divided in government.

The chemistry needed to dismantle an establishment is rarely the same chemistry required to govern a fragile economy, negotiate international obligations, calm markets and manage competing ambitions inside the same movement.

Which brings us to Senegal.

For years, Senegal represented one of Africa's brightest democratic examples — a politically stable nation with strong institutions, intellectual vibrancy and relative democratic maturity in a region increasingly battered by coups and constitutional manipulations.

That image is now facing its most serious political stress test in years.

The dramatic collapse of the political partnership between President Bassirou Diomaye Faye and Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko has shaken the foundations of the youthful political revolution that swept them into office in 2024.

What once looked like an inseparable political alliance has now deteriorated into open confrontation.

President Faye's decision to dismiss Sonko as prime minister and dissolve the government after months of simmering tensions over economic policy, debt management, IMF negotiations and internal political control did not merely signal a political disagreement. It signaled the beginning of a battle for the soul, direction and ownership of Senegal's revolution.

But perhaps none of this should surprise careful observers of African politics.

Mr President, you always knew that governing alongside Sonko would never be an ordinary arrangement.

You knew Sonko was not simply endorsing your candidacy after being barred from contesting the presidency himself. He was transferring to you one of the most emotionally charged political movements Senegal had witnessed in decades — a movement built on youth anger, anti-establishment energy, pan-African nationalism and resistance against the political machinery of former president Macky Sall.

Millions did not merely vote for Diomaye Faye the individual. They voted for what many believed was the continuation of the Sonko revolution.

And therein lay the contradiction from the very beginning. Because Sonko remained more than a politician. He remained the emotional centre of the uprising itself.

Faye may have occupied the constitutional presidency, but Sonko retained the revolutionary mystique, the street credibility and the emotional ownership of the movement among Senegal's politically restless youth.

That duality was always going to become unstable.

The cracks had been visible for months. Reports increasingly pointed to disagreements over Senegal's worsening debt pressures, negotiations with the International Monetary Fund, state appointments, economic reforms and succession calculations toward the 2029 presidential election.

And make no mistake — beneath the policy disputes lies a much deeper political war already underway.

The battle for 2029 has already begun.

For Sonko, the danger is obvious. If Faye successfully consolidates state power and builds his own political machinery, Sonko risks becoming the revolutionary founder gradually pushed to the margins by the very administration he helped create.

For Faye, the threat is equally serious. Without Sonko's populist energy and grassroots mobilization machinery, can he maintain political legitimacy among the millions who saw the two men as inseparable symbols of change?

That is the paradox now haunting Senegal's leadership.

And perhaps the most fascinating political possibility of all is whether desperation may eventually produce the unthinkable.

If President Faye's popularity weakens further amid economic hardship, rising debt pressures and mounting political instability, could he quietly seek accommodation with the very political establishment that Sonko spent years fighting — including networks aligned to Macky Sall?

In African politics, yesterday's enemy often becomes tomorrow's strategic ally.

It would not be the first time survival instincts overpowered revolutionary purity.

Ironically, Macky Sall himself may now watch these developments with quiet satisfaction. The same political establishment once accused of jailing, humiliating and politically isolating Sonko has now witnessed the implosion of the movement that ultimately removed Sall from power.

But beyond personalities, betrayals and political theatre lies the far more serious issue: the economy.

Political instability may excite commentators and energize television debates, but markets do not celebrate uncertainty.

Investors do not reward internal warfare.

International lenders do not enjoy confusion at the summit of power.

Senegal is navigating one of the most delicate economic moments in its modern history. Debt concerns, fiscal pressures and disrupted international financing arrangements already threaten economic stability. The collapse of cohesion inside the country's leadership now risks magnifying those anxieties.

The uncertainty surrounding who truly controls Senegal's political direction could delay reforms, complicate debt restructuring discussions and weaken investor confidence at precisely the moment Dakar desperately requires economic calm and policy clarity.

For international partners — including the IMF, Gulf investors, China, Europe and the United States — the implosion of the Faye-Sonko alliance raises uncomfortable questions about continuity, governance and economic management.

Can Senegal still provide predictable leadership?

Can long-term agreements survive political fragmentation?

Can a government at war with itself maintain investor confidence?

These questions matter because Senegal is not merely another African state navigating political turbulence. Senegal carries symbolic democratic importance for the continent itself.

And yet perhaps Senegal still possesses something many countries lose during moments like these: strong democratic instincts and institutional resilience.

That may ultimately save it.

But history still offers a warning.

Liberation movements and revolutionary coalitions often collapse not because of external enemies, but because of internal rivalries over who truly owns the victory once power is achieved.

Africa has seen this before.

The only unanswered question now is whether Senegal's young giants will learn from that history — or repeat it.

-----------------------

Daniel Makokera is a renowed media personality  who has worked as journalist, television anchor, producer and conference presenter for over 20 years. Throughout his career as presenter and anchor, he has travelled widely across the continent and held exclusive interviews with some of Africa's most illustrious leaders. These include former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, former South African presidents Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki, former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, Zimbabwean Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and presidents Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe and Joseph Kabila of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. He currently is the CEO of Pamuzinda Productions based in South Africa.

South African Politicians Who Use Xenophobia to Garner Votes Are Playing a Perilous Game

Ihsaan Haffejee/GroundUp

A street vendor was attacked when hundreds of people marched through the streets of Pretoria, protesting against the presence of undocumented immigrants in South Africa and high unemployment. Led by March and March, the protest was joined by ActionSA and anti-immigrant vigilantes Operation Dudula.

24 May 2026

Daily Maverick (Johannesburg)

By Stephen Grootes

Events in Durban and Joburg last week showed again the political power of prejudice against migrants. The temptation by politicians who have failed in our cities to use this issue in local elections is growing stronger. Nothing good will come from this.

Over the last few months, the March and March movement has held regular protests in the Durban CBD. Last week, a group of foreign nationals, saying they feared for their lives, camped outside the Durban Central Police Station.

Their leaders said they felt it was the one place where they would be safe.

But police refused to allow them to stay and used physical force to disperse them. This led to anguish, with women pleading for help.

They then went to the Diakonia Centre, saying they wanted to speak to officials at the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

On Thursday, several people from March and March and MK arrived at the Diakonia Centre, telling television reporters they were there to see what was happening.

As if by magic, a large crowd gathered, waving South African flags and chanting anti-immigrant slogans.

Inside the Diakonia property were the foreign nationals, and outside was a growing group of people who seemed to want to use physical force against the foreign nationals. Many of the foreign nationals were recording this on their phones.

Read the full story on Daily Maverick.

Pan-Africanists Urge Collective Action On Water Crisis

African Union

Commemoration of Africa Day.

24 May 2026

The New Times (Kigali)

By Jesca Mutamba

Africa's development ambitions will remain out of reach unless governments, businesses, and citizens work together to address the continent's water and sanitation challenges, says the Chairman of the Pan-African Movement (PAM) Rwanda Chapter.

Speaking during an international conference held in Kigali on Sunday, May 24, to mark Africa Day, Protais Musoni urged Africans to embrace unity and collective responsibility in advancing the continent's development.

"The Africa we want is within our reach," Musoni said, urging Africans to remain united, determined, and committed to advancing the continent's transformation agenda.

Africa Day is observed annually on May 25to commemorate the founding of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) in 1963. The OAR is the precursor to the African Union (AU). This year's theme is "Assuring Sustainable Water Availability and Safe Sanitation Systems to Achieve the Goals of Agenda 2063."

The conference, organised by PAM-Rwanda in partnership with government institutions, diplomats, and private sector actors, focused on how people-centred and market-driven approaches can help Africa improve access to clean water and sanitation.

Musoni said access to clean water and proper sanitation must be treated as a basic right rather than a privilege.

"Far too many communities still lack access to safe drinking water and adequate sanitation, which undermines public health and holds back economic growth," he said.

He called on African governments, investors, and entrepreneurs to invest in sustainable water systems and regional infrastructure capable of serving future generations.

"We need to think about creating infrastructure across our borders so that we can share the resources and climate opportunities we have," he said.

Musoni also argued that Africa's integration agenda cannot succeed without ordinary citizens playing an active role in it.

"The Pan-African Movement exists to remove obstacles that undermine African dignity, political, economic, social, and cultural unity," he said.

He outlined PAM-Rwanda's priorities for the next three years, including mobilisation for Pan-African awareness, leadership development, research and policy discussions, and strengthening collaboration across African borders, beginning with the East African region.

The discussions also drew attention to the scale of Africa's water and sanitation challenges, with participants noting that millions across the continent still lack access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation services.

Speaking on behalf of African ambassadors accredited to Rwanda, Doudou Sow, Senegal's High Commissioner and Dean of the African Diplomatic Corps, described water cooperation as critical to the continent's peace and economic integration.

"Water diplomacy is not a technical or environmental issue, but rather a strategic imperative for peace, prosperity, and African integration," Sow said.

He noted that many of Africa's major river basins, including the Nile, Congo, and Niger, cut across national borders, making cooperation between countries essential.

"In this context, cooperation in economic, security, health, food, and energy sectors is essential to guarantee access to water for future generations," the diplomat said.

Sow warned that continued shortages of quality water could severely affect African economies through reduced agricultural productivity and growing health burdens.

He also called for stronger regional legal frameworks and joint investments in infrastructure, irrigation, hydroelectricity, and disaster management.

"Cooperation in the sharing of water resources often generates benefits far beyond the water sector," he said.

The Senegalese envoy urged African countries to ensure that young people, women, communities, and the private sector are actively involved in designing solutions to water and sanitation challenges.

"It is crucial to prioritise the needs and voices of citizens, young people, women, and vulnerable communities in order to guarantee equitable and inclusive solutions," he said.

Read the original article on New Times.

Africa Day 2026 - Nigeria Has Obligations to Africans

African Union

Commemoration of Africa Day.

25 May 2026

Vanguard (Lagos)

By Owei Lakemfa

Six days after the October 1, 1960 independence of Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, Prime Minister Abubakar Tafawa-Balewa stood before the United Nations, UN. The historical mission of Nigeria he said, is to develop Africa, the continent which gave birth to humanity and modern civilization. The date was October 7, 1960 in the hallowed chambers of the UN in New York.

Tafawa-Balewa laid out the four cardinal principles of the emergent African giant. First, its desire to be on friendly terms with all countries. In other words, that Nigeria would not inherit the real or imaginary enemies of its former colonial masters. Secondly, that it has no expansionist intentions. So, Nigeria, unlike expansionist countries like Britain, United States, Spain, Belgium and Portugal, would not go about trampling on other countries or stealing territories. Thirdly, that Nigeria does not intend to align itself with any power bloc. So, its mission includes independence, respect and equality of all peoples. This was a reflection of the core principles of the Asian-African Conference, historically called the Bandung Conference which held five years earlier in Indonesia.

This commitment to human progress and development was to lead Nigeria into playing a major role in the evolution of the Non Aligned Movement, NAM when it was established on September 1, 1961. At a point the NAM had 121 developing countries as members. Fourthly, that Nigeria was committed to working with other African States for the progress of the continent and, to: " assist in bringing all African territories to a state of responsible independence." The next major international outing of Nigeria was at its maiden attendance of the International Labour Organisation, ILO Conference in June, 1961.

The Nigerian tripartite Delegation of government, workers and employers was led by Labour Minister, Chief Joseph Modupe Johnson, JMJ. He told the world that the Nigerian people: "have good will, love and affection towards other people irrespective of the colour of their skins, (and) believe in the equality of all races, abhor racial discrimination in all its forms and with all its trappings, wherever and by whomever it is practiced." He said the Apartheid system in South Africa negated such believes and therefore moved, that the country be expelled from the ILO. It was unprecedented because the ILO was the UN house of consensus and so to say, no politics was entertained. But rather than allow the traditional consensus in the ILO which was then 42 years old, Nigeria forced a vote.

A total 163 delegates voted for the Nigerian resolution, none against while there were 89 abstentions primarily by France, Belgium, Britain, Australia, Italy, USA, Spain and South Africa itself. That day, 65 years ago, Nigeria struck a mortal blow against Apartheid. Twenty nine years later, newly freed Nelson Mandela on Friday June 8, 1990 stood in the ILO chambers to thank it for that historic resolution and assured it Apartheid was dead, so South Africa could be readmitted. The next major historical stand of an independent Nigeria was on May 24, 1963 when the the Organization of African Unity, OAU, now called the African Union, was founded in Addis Abba, Ethiopia.

Nigeria's basic position on African unity as presented that day by Tafawa-Balewa was that of mutual respect: "There must be acceptance of equality by all the States. No matter whether they are big or small, they are all sovereign and their sovereignty is sovereignty. The size of a state, its population or its wealth should not be the criterion...Nigeria recognizes all the existing boundaries in Africa, and recognizes the existence of all the countries in Africa."

Nigeria, he said, was prepared to: "do anything to secure the freedom of the continent of Africa" He warned the gathering that African countries must not be blinded by political independence because: "Colonialism can take many different forms. Our countries can be colonized economically, if we are not careful. Just as we have fought political domination, it is also important that we fight against economic domination by other countries." The following years were those of turbulence for Nigeria and Africa especially with the liberation wars in which Nigeria provided funds, arms, scholarship and passports to liberation fighters. When the US and its Western Europe allies tested the African will during the struggles for liberation and true independence in Angola, Nigeria courageously rose to the defence of the African peoples.

Then Nigerian Head of State, General Murtala Muhammed at the OAU Summit on January 11, 1976 told off the enemies of the continent, declaring that: "Africa has Come of age. It is no longer under the orbit of any extra continental power. It should no longer take orders from any country, however powerful. The fortunes of Africa are in our hands to make or mar. For too long have we been kicked around: for too long have we been treated like adolescents who cannot discern their interests and act accordingly. For too long has it been presumed that the African needs outside 'experts' to tell him who are his friends and who are his enemies. The time has come when we should make it clear that we can decide for ourselves; that we know our own interests and how to protect those interests; that we are capable of resolving African problems without presumptuous lessons in ideological dangers which, more often than not, have no relevance for us, nor for the problem at hand."

Despite Nigeria going through its own crises including a gruesome three-year Civil War, its focus on Africa and Pan Africanism, has never waned. In order to build greater unity amongst Africans and people of African descent worldwide, Nigeria in 1977 hosted the largest festival of African arts and culture in history, called FESTAC. It attracted about 500,000 visitors and 16,000 delegates across the world. Over the years, Nigeria has contributed towards peace not just in Africa but across the globe sending peacekeepers.

Today, May 25, 2026, as we mark Africa Day or what was known as Africa Freedom Day or African Liberation Day, Nigerians must not forget her past. She must not overlook the fact that one quarter of the world Black population live here; that we have shed Nigerian blood to bring peace in countries like Liberia and Sierra Leone and, made tremendous sacrifices for the liberation of our continent. What we need for the development of the continent is integration which would be impossible without our active participation. We must realize that in times of crises, while Nigeria may be big enough to take in citizens of virtually any African country, no African country can take in Nigerians. Besides, Africa is there for us to lead especially in the economic development of the continent.

Africa must unite!

Read the original article on Vanguard.

Kayode Fayemi Warns Africa Against Weak Institutions, Xenophobia and Dependency

African Union

Commemoration of Africa Day.

25 May 2026

This Day (Lagos)

By Gbenga Sodeinde in Ado Ekiti

A former governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, has warned that Africa risked deeper instability and democratic decline if leaders failed to strengthen institutions, tackle poverty and resist rising xenophobia across the continent.

Fayemi gave the warning while delivering the 16th Africa Day Lecture organised by the Thabo Mbeki Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa.

Speaking on the theme, "Advancing African Unity: Sovereignty, Solidarity and the Renewal of Institutions," hesaid many African countries were battling weakening democratic governance, growing insecurity, economic dependency and loss of public trust in leadership.

According to him, military coups in parts of Africa, particularly within the Sahel region, reflected deeper failures of governance and institutions rather than mere political accidents.

"Military intervention is often not the disease itself, but a symptom of deeper institutional crises. The real danger confronting many African democracies today is the erosion of public trust," he stated.

The former Minister of Mines and Steel Development, argued that elections alone could not sustain democracy where governments continually failed to provide security, justice, inclusion and economic opportunities for citizens.

He lamented that democracy in many African countries had become associated with "elite circulation rather than social transformation," warning that persistent poverty, corruption and exclusion were fueling frustration among citizens.

The former minister also cautioned against the growing wave of Afrophobia and xenophobia in parts of Africa, particularly South Africa, saying hostility against fellow Africans undermined the ideals of Pan-Africanism and continental unity.

Referencing Africa's collective role in the anti-apartheid struggle, Fayemi recalled that countries such as Nigeria made huge sacrifices in support of South Africa's liberation.

"South Africa's liberation was not won by South Africans alone," he said, adding that violence against fellow Africans represented "a crisis of continental consciousness."

While acknowledging economic hardship and unemployment as contributing factors, Fayemi insisted that such pressures could not justify exclusion or attacks on fellow Africans.

He, therefore, called for the promotion of "continental citizenship," stressing that national identity should not conflict with African solidarity.

"We must teach younger generations that being proudly Nigerian, South African, Kenyan, Ghanaian or Senegalese is entirely compatible with being proudly African," he said.

In another development, Fayemi, has expressed deep sorrow over the passing of the Alawe of Ilawe-Ekiti, Oba Adebanji Ajibade Alabi, describing the monarch's death as a monumental loss to Ekiti State and the nation.

In a condolence message made available on Saturday, Fayemi extended his sympathies to the government and people of Ekiti State, the Ilawe Royal Family, the immediate family of the late monarch, and the entire people of Ilawe-Ekiti.

Read the original article on This Day.

Tanzania Grants Citizenship to 64 Foreigners Between July 2025 and April 2026

25 May 2026

Tanzania Daily News (Dar es Salaam)

By Esther Takwa

Dodoma — A total of 64 foreigners have been granted Tanzanian citizenship between July 2025 and April 2026.

This was announced by the Minister for Home Affairs, Patrobas Katambi at the Parliament in Dodoma today when presenting the ministry's budget estimates for the year 2026/27 noting that the Immigration department continues processing applications from foreigners seeking Tanzanian citizenship while also handling cases of Tanzanians renouncing their nationality after acquiring citizenship in other countries.

The minister told lawmakers that 17 Tanzanians renounced their citizenship during the period under review in line with the Citizenship Act, Chapter 357 of 2023, which does not allow dual citizenship.

Additionally, he also revealed that a total of 203 Tanzanians were repatriated from various countries after violating immigration laws, including entering or residing in those nations without following legal procedures.

However, the minister said that the government will continue strengthening immigration systems and enforcing compliance with citizenship and migration laws to safeguard national security and protect the country's interests.

Read the original article on Daily News.

Young Men Storm a DR Congo Hospital Treating Ebola Patients to Demand Bodies of Their Kin

Family members of an Ebola victim mourn as the coffin is taken away for burial, at Sofepadi Hospital in Bunia, Congo, Saturday, May 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Moses Sawasawa)

By JEAN-YVES KAMALE and MONIKA PRONCZUK

10:57 PM EDT, May 24, 2026

KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — Angry young men stormed a hospital treating Ebola patients at the heart of the latest outbreak of the disease in eastern Congo on Sunday evening, forcing the medical staff to scramble to evacuate the patients as gunfire rang out in the area.

It was not immediately known if anyone was hurt in the attack on the Mongbwalu General Hospital but Dr. Richard Lokudu, the hospital’s medical director, told The Associated Press the attackers demanded that two bodies of their kin be handed over to them.

There was gunfire and the medics were trying to evacuate the patients and the staff, Lokudu said over the phone.

“Mongbwalu General Hospital is on general alert,” he added. He did not have any further details of the unfolding turmoil.

The attack — the third in a week’s time on health care facilities where medical workers struggle with lack of resources to treat suspected Ebola cases — underlined the challenges of the outbreak, which the World Health Organization has declared a public health emergency of international concern.

Bodies of those who died of Ebola can be highly contagious and lead to further spread when people prepare them for burial and gather for funerals. ‘

In response to the outbreak, Congolese authorities have mandated that the dangerous work of burying suspected victims be managed wherever possible by authorities, which can be met by protests from families and friends. On Friday, the government said funeral wakes and gatherings of more than 50 people would be banned in northeastern Congo in an effort to curb the spread of the virus.

On Saturday, a group of residents of Mongbwalu, located in Ituri province, attacked and set fire to a tent set up for suspected and confirmed Ebola cases by the Doctors Without Borders humanitarian group.

During that attack, 18 people with suspected Ebola infections left the facility and were now unaccounted for, Lokudu had said earlier.

On Thursday, another treatment center, in the town of Rwampara, was burned down after family members were banned from retrieving the body of a local man suspected to have died of Ebola.

WHO has said the outbreak poses a “very high” risk for Congo — up from a previous categorization of “high” — but that the risk of the disease spreading globally remains low.

Earlier on Sunday, the Congolese Ministry of Communication said on X that there were 904 suspected cases of Ebola, mostly in northeastern Ituri Province — a significant jump from the previously announced more than 700 suspected Ebola cases.

The ministry also said the total suspected Ebola deaths stood at 119, but the numbers it released separately for each region added up to 220. Officials could not immediately be reached to explain the discrepancy.

There is no available vaccine for the Bundibugyo virus, a rare type of Ebola, which spread undetected for weeks in Ituri following the first reported death — in late April in the town of Bunia, the provincial capital — while authorities tested for another, more common, Ebola virus and came up negative.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said on Saturday that three of its volunteers had died from the outbreak in Mongbwalu. The agency said it believed the three healthcare workers contracted the virus on March 27 while handling dead bodies as part of a humanitarian mission unrelated to Ebola.

If confirmed, this would significantly push back the timeline of the outbreak.

___

Pronczuk reported from Dakar, Senegal.

Ugandans Rue Link to Bundibugyo, the Ebola Virus Type Named After a District of Cocoa Farmers

By RODNEY MUHUMUZA

5:00 AM EDT, May 23, 2026

KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — Boon-dee-BOO-joh.

Before it became the somewhat easy-to-mispronounce name of a rare type of Ebola virus, Bundibugyo is a mountainous district in western Uganda that even some locals would struggle to pinpoint on a map.

It’s home to roughly 200,000 people. Many are cocoa farmers who search for whatever cultivable land they can find in the impossibly steep landscape of hills and valleys marking Uganda’s border with Congo. As an example of the classic village idyll, Bundibugyo is a beautiful place.

Yet it now trends for an unpleasant reason, making some Ugandans rue Bundibugyo’s association with the current Ebola outbreak, which has infected hundreds of people in eastern Congo. There are 160 suspected Ebola deaths in two provinces.

Virus type discovered in 2007

The Ugandan district’s connection to the Bundibugyo virus stems from an Ebola outbreak there nearly two decades ago that was flagged as a new species of Ebola, a viral disease that usually manifests as hemorrhagic fever.

The outbreak wasn’t the Sudan virus, named for the area in present-day South Sudan where that type was first identified. It also wasn’t the type known as Zaire, as present-day Congo was known when Ebola — itself the name of a Congolese river — was first discovered in 1976.

So, the November 2007 outbreak in a remote part of western Uganda came to be known as Bundibugyo, one that scientists even now haven’t studied as much. That is why Ebola specialists say it is particularly dangerous. Moreover, it was spreading in Congolese villages before health authorities there identified it as the cause of sickness in a growing number of people.

The 2007 outbreak in Bundibugyo killed at least 37 people but had been contained by the end of the year. A second outbreak of the Bundibugyo virus, also relatively small, came in 2012 in Congo’s northeast.

Initial cases in those outbreaks were identified early, allowing for a quick public health response, according to Dr. Tom Ksiazek, a University of Texas Medical Branch virologist who directed the group within the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that first identified the Bundibugyo virus.

Ugandans upset about the name

This time, while there is no Ebola in Bundibugyo, a lingering connection to the picturesque Ugandan district is hurtful, said Ugandan government spokesman Alan Kasujja, who has urged global health authorities to clarify that Uganda isn’t the epicenter of the latest outbreak.

“Bundibugyo is too beautiful to be the name of a disease,” he said on X. “We need to take back its name from this madness.”

The World Health Organization is responsible for the taxonomic descriptions. As was seen with the global mpox outbreak — the disease’s name was changed in 2022 from monkeypox — the United Nations agency is sensitive to the use of descriptors or tags that may expose whole communities to stigmatization.

With Ebola, however, the trend has been to name viruses for the places where they were first identified.

Ugandan health authorities have experience dealing with Ebola, one reason they are adamant there is “no Ebola” in this East African country and want WHO to be more specific in its updates on the toll of the outbreak now deemed to be of global concern.

Cases in Uganda linked to Congo

Uganda has reported five cases, all linked to the outbreak in Congo. One of them, a 59-year-old Congolese man, was admitted to a hospital in Kampala, the Ugandan capital, on May 11 and died three days later. On Saturday, Ugandan health authorities said a driver and a health worker — both Ugandans — exposed to that Congolese patient have since tested positive. The others are two Congolese women who sought medical care in Uganda before Congo declared an outbreak on May 15.

This outbreak is on “the Congo side” mainly, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said Thursday, urging local tourism authorities to fight the perception that Ebola is spreading in Uganda.

Museveni urged Ugandans to “stop shaking hands” as part of measures to avoid infection. He also ordered the postponement of an annual religious event that attracts thousands of pilgrims, from Congo and elsewhere, who converge around a Catholic basilica just outside Kampala by June 3.

Other measures announced Thursday include the suspension of all public transportation and flights between Congo and Uganda.

Contact tracing is key

The risk stemming from cross-border commerce is high, said Dr. Emmanuel Batiibwe, who led efforts to stop an Ebola outbreak in 2022 that killed at least 55 people.

Stopping the current outbreak from spreading into Uganda will require “enhanced surveillance at all points of entry,” he said.

Uganda has had multiple Ebola outbreaks, including one in 2000 that killed more than 200 people. There was an outbreak in Kampala last year.

All available vaccines and treatments for Ebola don’t work for Bundibugyo patients. Tracing contacts and isolating them is seen as especially key to stopping the spread of this virus, in addition to getting healthcare workers proper protective equipment.

A family of fruit bats is believed to be the natural hosts of the viruses that cause Ebola, according to WHO. Ebola is spread by contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person or contaminated materials.

Nigeria’s Military Says Troops Rescued 92 People Abducted by Rebels

By DYEPKAZAH SHIBAYAN

10:58 AM EDT, May 24, 2026

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — Ninety-two people who were abducted by jihadi extremists have been rescued by troops in Nigeria’s conflict-battered northeast region, the country’s military said Sunday.

The abductees — 52 males, 33 females, and seven children — were rescued along the Buratai–Kamuya road in the Biu area of Borno State, military spokesperson Sani Uba said in a statement.

The militants were “forcibly herding” their victims off the road and into the bush before they were intercepted by the soldiers, Uba said.

“Converging on the terrorists in a well-coordinated pursuit toward the Mangari-Dora general area, Operation HADIN KAI troops engaged the insurgents and forced them to abandon their captives and flee in confusion,” he said.

The military did not specify how long those rescued had been in captivity.

Militant groups operating in northern Nigeria include Boko Haram and a splinter organization that broke away to affiliate with the Islamic State group. They range across vast areas, in addition to numerous criminal groups specializing in kidnapping for ransom, generally called “bandits.”

Nigeria’s complex security crisis has killed thousands of people, according to the United Nations.

Last week, the West African country said a joint operation with the United States against the IS group has killed over 170 militants. Prior to that, Nigeria announced the killing of Abu Bakr al-Mainuki and Abd-al Wahhab, top leaders of the extremists group.

South African Gaza flotilla Activists Allege They Were Shocked with Electricity in Israeli Detention

By MOGOMOTSI MAGOME

2:37 PM EDT, May 23, 2026

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — South African activists who were detained when their boats were intercepted while trying to breach Israel’s blockade of Gaza alleged Saturday they were beaten and tortured by Israeli soldiers in a detention facility.

The Global Sumud Flotilla of 50 vessels was intercepted Monday in international waters some 250 miles (400 kilometers) off the coast of Israel as they sought to breach the blockade and deliver aid to Palestinians in Gaza. The activists said they were held for several days in Israel’s K’tziot prison where some said they were shocked with electricity while being interrogated about their participation in the flotilla.

The Israeli government has denied allegations of mistreatment of detained flotilla activists, saying they were “false and entirely without factual basis.” There was no immediate response to the activists’ accusations Saturday.

The activists were welcomed by pro-Palestinian supporters and their families as they arrived in South Africa from Turkey on Saturday morning.

They said many of them received harsh treatment, especially when the Israeli soldiers learned they were from South Africa, a country that has taken Israel to the International Court of Justice and accused it of committing genocide in Gaza.

Tracking the Gaza ceasefire

Keeping track of the status of President Donald Trump’s 20-point plan for a ceasefire that would end Hamas’ rule in Gaza and rebuilding the territory after a devastating war.

“We were denied access to water for a while. Food they did give us, food that was not suitable for human consumption. We were denied access to toilets for many hours, and the minute we started protesting we were shot at with rubber bullets,” said activist Faizel Moosa.


Moosa, a former anti-apartheid activist during South Africa’s liberation struggle against white minority rule, said the treatment they received under detention was the worst he had ever experienced.


“Having experienced detention under the apartheid regime during the struggle, this was far worse. It just goes to show that this is what Palestinians go through on a daily basis,” said Moosa.

Dr. Margaret Connolly, who was among an Irish contingent in the flotilla, said she had never been so frightened as she described dehumanizing conditions in detention.

She said some people were struck with guns. Detainees who had been stripped of their clothes and denied blankets had to huddle together in the cold to prevent hypothermia.

Connolly, the sister of Irish President Catherine Connolly, was among a group of 15 Irish activists who were greeted by cheering supporters and family members as they arrived home in Dublin on Saturday.

She said Israeli forces didn’t provide enough water or toiletries, and her medical kit was confiscated, preventing her from providing proper medical care. She said bread bags and shirt sleeves used for bandages and slings were later taken away.

“They wanted us to suffer,” Connolly said. “A lot of the soldiers with American accents, shouting down: ‘You should have thought of this before you came.’”

Three Chileans who were detained by Israel while attempting to reach Gaza to deliver aid also arrived home Saturday, where they criticized the Chilean government for what they described as its inaction in securing their release.

Víctor Chanfreau, Claudio Caiozzi and Carolina Eltit were part of the Global Sumud Flotilla. A large group of supporters greeted the trio at the airport in the capital, Santiago, with Palestinian flags, signs and applause.

“The Chilean government acted terribly, unsurprisingly,” Chanfreau told reporters at the airport, calling the Chilean Foreign Ministry’s diplomatic efforts in their detention “negligent.”

Eltit reported being beaten and held “in precarious conditions, without toilet paper, one bathroom for 190 people, lying in the sun, tied hand and foot.”

Connolly criticized the Irish government for rejecting sanctions against Israel.

Activist Qutb Hendricks called on the South African government to pile pressure on Israel by banning the sale of coal and other supplies to the country.

___

Associated Press writers Brian Melley in London and Regina Garcia Cano in Mexico City contributed to this report.

Russia to Arrange Visit of Foreign Reporters to Site of Starobelsk Attack — Diplomat

“I hope BBC and CNN reporters won’t happen to be on vacation,” Maria Zakharova said

Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova Russian Foreign Ministry/TASS

© Russian Foreign Ministry/TASS

MOSCOW, May 23. /TASS/. Moscow will arrange a visit of foreign reporters to the site of the Ukrainian attack on a college in the Lugansk People’s Republic amid false allegations by Western officials, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.

"As Westerner officials, including the Latvian envoy who has lost her dignity, circulated blatant lies at the UN Security Council meeting yesterday, claiming that the Ukrainian armed forces had not attacked the college in Starobelsk, we are arranging a visit of foreign correspondents accredited in Moscow to the site of the tragedy," she wrote on Telegram.

"I hope BBC and CNN reporters won’t happen to be on vacation," Zakharova added with irony.

The Ukrainian military launched drones at the academic building and dormitory of the Lugansk Pedagogical University’s Vocational College in the city of Starobelsk in the early hours of May 22. As many as 86 students aged between 14 and 18 years were inside at the time of the attack. According to the Russian Emergencies Ministry, the strike killed ten people and left another 38 injured. Eleven students remain missing.

Death Toll from Ukrainian Attack on Starobelsk College Rises to 16

Four more bodies have been recovered from under the rubble, spokesperson for the Russian Emergencies Ministry said

© Alexander Reka/TASS

MOSCOW, May 23. /TASS/. The bodies of four children have been recovered from under the rubble of a college in Starobelsk, bringing the death toll to 16, a spokesperson for the Russian Emergencies Ministry told TASS.

"Four more bodies have been recovered from under the rubble," the spokesperson said.

Another 42 people suffered injuries and five more people remain under the rubble.

The Ukrainian military launched drones at the academic building and dormitory of the Lugansk Pedagogical University’s Vocational College in the city of Starobelsk in the early hours of May 22. As many as 86 students aged from 14 and 18 years were inside at the time of the attack.

Ukrainian Forces Not Easing Up on Their Attacks on Energodar, Damaging Two Buses — ZNPP

Two more passenger buses have been damaged in Energodar

© Alexey Konovalos|TASS

MELITOPOL, May 23. /TASS/. The situation in Energodar, a satellite city of the Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant, remains extremely tense due to constant Ukrainian attacks, with two passenger buses damaged in the most recent strike, the station reported on its Telegram.

"Two more passenger buses have been damaged in Energodar. The city is under virtually constant shelling. Vehicles, cell phone towers, residential rooftops, and urban infrastructure are being hit. The situation remains extremely tense. The intensity of the attacks is not decreasing. Both nuclear power plant employees who ensure the plant's safety and all Energodar residents are under constant psychological pressure," the statement said.

Death Toll at Starobelsk College Up to 21; Search Operations Over — Ministry

All the bodies of the victims have been recovered from the rubble

© Alexander Reka/TASS

MOSCOW, May 23. /TASS/. According to the latest data, 21 people were killed in a Ukrainian attack on a college dormitory in Starobelsk in the Lugansk People’s Republic; rescuers have recovered the bodies of all the victims from under the rubble, the press service of the Russian Emergencies Ministry told TASS.

"Search operations in Starobelsk at the site of the dormitory collapse have been completed. All the bodies of the victims have been recovered from the rubble," the statement said.

As a result of the Ukrainian attack, 21 people were killed and 42 were injured.

Russia Uses Oreshnik Weapon to Strike Ukrainian Military Command Posts

That was response to terrorist attacks by the Ukrainian military against civilian facilities located on the territory of the Russian Federation, the Russian Defense Ministry reported

© Russian Defense Ministry/TASS

MOSCOW, May 24. /TASS/. In response to terrorist attacks by the Ukrainian military against civilian facilities located on the territory of the Russian Federation, Russian forces launched a massive strike using Oreshnik, Iskander, Kinzhal and Zircon missiles at Ukrainian military command facilities, the Russian Defense Ministry reported on Sunday.

"In response to the terrorist attacks by Ukraine on civilian targets in Russia, the Russian Armed Forces launched a massive strike using Oreshnik, Iskander, Kinzhal and Zircon missiles… as well as unmanned aerial vehicles to strike enemy’s military command posts, air bases and military-industrial production complexes in Ukraine," the ministry stated.

The ministry added that all designated targets were hit and objectives of the preliminary-set mission had been achieved.

Europe's 'Indulgence' for Kiev Prompts Strikes on Civilian Targets — Russian Envoy

Rodion Miroshnik noted that at the current stage, European states are deliberately ignoring violations of international and humanitarian law by Ukraine

Russian Foreign Ministry Ambassador-at-Large on the Kiev Regime's War Crimes Rodion Miroshnik Mikhail Tereshchenko/TASS

© Mikhail Tereshchenko/TASS

MOSCOW, May 25. /TASS/. Europe effectively assumes that Ukraine is allowed to do whatever it wants, and it is precisely this "indulgence" from the West that has become one of the reasons for new Ukrainian strikes on civilian targets, Russian Foreign Ministry Ambassador-at-Large on the Kiev Regime's War Crimes Rodion Miroshnik told the Izvestia newspaper.

According to him, at the current stage, European states are deliberately ignoring violations of international and humanitarian law by Ukraine, effectively absolving it of responsibility for any actions in the conflict zone.

"This [war crimes -- TASS] is one of the important issues that will undoubtedly arise on the negotiation track. The question here is whether international humanitarian law in the form of the Geneva Conventions, Additional Protocols, and a whole list of conventions should be swept under the rug, or whether international humanitarian law is binding on everyone. If it is binding on everyone, then Europe will have to admit that Kiev committed such crimes," the ambassador said.

In the early hours of May 22, the Ukrainian armed forces used UAVs to attack the academic building and dormitory of the Starobelsk Pedagogical College of the Lugansk State Pedagogical University in the LPR. At the time of the strike, 86 children aged 14 to 18 were inside. Twenty-one people were killed. According to LPR head Leonid Pasechnik, 65 children were injured.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

African Liberation Day Must Advance the Struggle Against Neo-Colonialism, Zionism and Imperialist Militarism 

ALD is more important today than ever in the history of oppressed and working class peoples around the globe

By Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Saturday May 23, 2026

Political Statement of Solidarity

Note: This statement was presented by the author at the annual African Liberation Day webinar organized by the All-African People’s Revolutionary Party (GC). The event was held under the theme “68 Years Fighting Neo-Colonialism: Forward to Pan-Africanism – One Unified Socialist Africa! Defend, Sustain and Advance the Pan-Africanist Character of African Liberation Day/Palestine (Nakba) Day Worldwide!” In addition to the host organization, numerous groups delivered statements from various geo-political regions throughout the globe including the Black Alliance for Peace Africa Team; Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM); Pan-African Society Community Forum (PASCF) of the UK; among others. Tributes were paid to various ancestors in the Pan-African and international people’s struggles such as President Dr. Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and Guinea-Conakry; President Ahmed Sekou Toure of Guinea-Conakry; Kwame Ture of Africa; Om Kalthoum of Egypt; Miriam Makeba of South Africa and Andree Blouin of the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

This year’s African Liberation Day takes on an added significance as a direct result of the global crisis of imperialism and its impact on peoples across the globe.

The situation on the African continent is marked by the enhanced aggressive policies of neo-colonialism. 

Just recently in the East African state of Kenya, the French imperialists partnering with the regime of President William Ruto held a conference claiming to represent the forward progress of the continent. Paris, which has been under fire in the Sahel region of West Africa through the revolutionary processes taking place in Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali, is attempting to reconfigure its neo-colonial strategy against African people.

A counter-summit organized by the Communist Party Marxist Kenya (CPMK) was attacked by the police and courts for its condemnation of French imperialism in Africa. During the following week, the transport workers in Kenya went on strike to protest the rising fuel costs precipitated by the United States imperialists unprovoked war against the Islamic Republic of Iran. Four people died during the strike which prompted panic among the Kenyan government which is closely allied with United States imperialism.

These developments illustrate the desperate situation of Washington, Wall Street, Paris and other imperialist centers in Western Europe and North America. The administration of President Donald Trump was met with firm resistance by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) since February 28. The leading imperialist state in the world and its zionist surrogates in Occupied Palestine failed in their attempts to overthrow the Iranian Revolution.

The Iranian Revolution has been a staunch ally of the African and Palestinian peoples since its inception. When the reactionary regime of the Shah was overthrown by the Iranian masses in early 1979, one of the first revolutionary governmental directives was to place an immediate ban on the export of oil to the racist apartheid regime in operation at the time in South Africa. In addition, the principal foreign policy objective of the Islamic Republic became the assistance to all resistance forces in Palestine and other revolutionaries throughout the West Asia region.

This is the reason behind the hostile imperialist military attacks by Tel Aviv and Washington against Iran. The Axis of Resistance extends from Palestine, Lebanon to Yemen and Iran. The IRGC revealed the vulnerability of imperialism and zionism through the destruction of Pentagon military bases in the UAE, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Jordan. The purported “iron dome” of Tel Aviv was ruptured severely by the IRGC drones and hypersonic missiles which struck at the heart of the settler-colonial regime in Palestine. 

Trump was compelled to halt the bombing of Iran after threatening to destroy their thousand-years civilization. After two months, the Islamic Republic maintains control of the Strait of Hormuz. The Palestinian and Lebanese people are continuing their resistance to the encroachments by the occupation forces. As a result of the events in Iran, the capitalist states are facing inflationary spirals which are hampering the ability of people to afford quality housing, food, education and affordable energy resources.

These events highlight the declining imperialist system. People around the world from Latin America to Africa and Asia are seriously discussing the necessity of de-dollarization. The Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa plus summit (BRICS+) is expanding, now encompassing more than half of the world’s population.

Africa is destined to play its part in the transformation of the world system from capitalism to socialism. There is no viable future under neo-colonialism, which Dr. Kwame Nkrumah described as the last stage of imperialism. Nkrumah also correctly noted that the U.S. capitalist structures are the main impediment to the genuine liberation of Africa and the transition to socialism on a continental scale.

Our Task in the Current Period

It is essential that the Revolutionary Pan-Africanist movement defends the people of Cuba, Venezuela and other states in South America and the Caribbean. The President of the Bolivarian Republic Nicholas Maduro and First Lady Cicilia Flores were kidnapped by the Pentagon and remain in detention in New York. 

The Republic of Cuba is under intense threats of a military intervention and potential targeted assassinations of its leadership. Cuba is an African nation in the Caribbean. The socialist government has been a staunch defender of the people of the continent. Between 1975 and 1989, former leader President Fidel Castro deployed 350,000 volunteers to assist in the struggle to liberate Angola. The defeat of the racist apartheid military forces in southern Angola created the conditions for the liberation of the Republic of Namibia by 1990.

In the same year that Namibia gained its independence, the apartheid regime was forced to release the long-held political prisoners such as Nelson Mandela and other leaders of the national liberation movement leading to collapse of the settler-colonial system. 

During 2014, thousands of Cuban healthcare workers were sent to West Africa where they played a monumental role in the arresting of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak which killed thousands of Africans in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea-Conakry. Cuba has trained physicians to serve people across the developing world including the nationally oppressed peoples of the U.S. 

In addition to the Caribbean and South America, we have no alternative other than defending and assisting the people of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger who are facing destabilization campaigns funded and coordinated by France, the U.S. and its surrogates in Ukraine. The resources and labor of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) belong to the African people themselves. Imperialism is attempting to reclaim this geo-political region for their own benefit.

It is significant that this ALD commemoration is recognizing the pivotal role of women in the historical and contemporary movements for liberation and socialism. The U.S. imperialists have been further exposed through the Epstein files controversy where the ruling class interests and its “rape culture” of teenage women is prompting fissures even within its own political tendencies.

The image of Um Kalthoum of Egypt, who made a monumental contribution to African culture for decades through her voice which spoke to the aspirations of the people in her country and throughout the entire North Africa and West Asia region, is an important recognition.

Miriam Makeba, the legendary South African singer and activist did much to introduce the people of the U.S. and around the world to the struggle against apartheid and settler-colonialism. As a result of her outspoken condemnation of racism, she was banned for decades from returning to her place of birth until 1990.

Andree Blouin through her work in the Central African Republic (CAR), Guinea-Conakry, Algeria and France helped advance the struggle for national liberation, feminism and socialism. Her work further uncovers the role of women in the 20th century efforts of African people to end colonialism and neo-colonialism.

Moving forward we have no other choice than to continue the movement towards Pan-Africanism and Socialism. There is no alternative to the objectives of total liberation and unification of Africa and the adoption of socialism on a global scale.

Free Palestine!

Defend Revolutionary Cuba and Venezuela!

Unite Africa and Its People Worldwide!

Workers and the Oppressed of the World Unite! 

There is Victory for Us!

Abayomi Azikiwe, PANW Editor, Featured on 1+1 with Youri Smouter, Discussing the History and Contemporary Affairs of the Kingdom of Lesotho, Part II

Watch this interview with Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, on 1+1 hosted by Youri Smouter where they review the history and contemporary affairs of the independent Kingdom of Lesotho in Southern Africa. 

To watch this episode just go to the following link: 1+1 E388 Youri Speaks to Abayomi Azikiwe of Pan-African Newswire on Lesotho's history Part 2 of 2 - YouTube

This is part two of the discussion on the Mountain Kingdom which is completely surrounded by the Republic of South Africa. 

We look back on the history of resistance against the Boers and the British colonialists along with the post-independence situation which has been characterized by sectarian party politics; support for the liberation movements in South Africa; and the development of the phenomenal Lesotho Highlands Water Project (LHWP) in cooperation with their surrounding neighbor which is the largest industrial state on the continent.

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