Category: Africa

  • Suluhu: Poll Unrest Has ‘Stained’ Tanzania’s Global Image

    Suluhu: Poll Unrest Has ‘Stained’ Tanzania’s Global Image

    Tanzania’s image for stability has been “stained” by the unrest that hit the East African nation during last month’s heavily disputed elections, President Samia Suluhu Hassan has acknowledged.

    Speaking as she swore in her new cabinet, Samia warned that the violence could “set the country back”.

    “We mostly depend on loans from international creditors, but what happened eroded our global credibility,” the 65-year-old president said.

    She was declared the winner of October’s presidential poll with 98% of the vote, but the opposition – which was barred from contesting – denounced the election as a “mockery of democracy”.

    Lazarus Chakwera, Malawi’s former president and the Commonwealth envoy, is due to arrive in Tanzania to lead reconciliation efforts between the two sides.

    Hundreds may have died as security forces crushed the protests under cover of a five-day internet blackout after the 29 October elections, according to the opposition. The authorities are yet to release an official death toll.

    Gruesome images and videos of dead Tanzanians have circulated online following the disputed elections, in which key opposition leaders were jailed or disqualified.

    The violence was shocking for a nation that had cultivated an image of calm and order for nearly six decades.

    At least 240 people were charged with treason after the protests.

    Last week, President Samia announced an official investigation into the unrest and urged prosecutors to consider reducing or dropping charges for detained individuals who were not directly involved in the protests.

    Samia came into office in 2021 following the death of President John Magufuli – and was initially praised for easing political repression, but the political space has since narrowed.

    On Tuesday, she cautioned that her next term could bring economic challenges, noting that securing financial support from international banks may not be easy.

    “In the first term, we used to get loans from outside due to our stability and the progress we made. But the stain we brought upon ourselves could now hinder that,” she said.

    “For this reason, we must focus on mobilising domestic resources and harnessing our God-given resources,” Samia told her ministers.

    One new appointment to the 27-member cabinet is her daughter, Wanu Hafidh Ameir, who was named deputy education minister.

    Wanu’s husband, Mohamed Mchengerwa, remains in cabinet taking up the post of health minister. Seven members of the previous cabinet have lost their positions.

    On Monday, Commonwealth Secretary-General Shirley Botchwey said Chakwera was to lead “constructive dialogue” during his four-day mission to Tanzania.

    He is set to hold consultations with government officials, political party leaders, civil society groups, religious and traditional leaders and diplomatic representatives.

    (BBC)

  • EXCLUSIVE: The Billion Dollar Oil Heist – How Shadow Networks Are Bleeding South Sudan Dry

    EXCLUSIVE: The Billion Dollar Oil Heist – How Shadow Networks Are Bleeding South Sudan Dry

    A Kenya Insights Investigation

    South Sudan’s oil wealth is vanishing into a labyrinth of shell companies, corrupt intermediaries and recycled traders with histories of bribery and fraud. At the center of this sophisticated looting operation stands an obscure Hong Kong firm that has suddenly seized control of the young nation’s economic lifeline while a British operator with a career built on embargo-busting orchestrates the largest systematic theft in the country’s history.

    Documents and sources reviewed by Kenya Insights reveal that Cathay Petroleum, a company that spent fifteen years in relative obscurity, now commands the lion’s share of South Sudanese crude exports through an alliance with Euroamerica Energy, a clandestine operation run by Idris Taha, a Northern Sudanese businessman who has made a career operating in the world’s most corrupt oil markets.

    Together with dismissed Vice President Benjamin Bol Mel and a network of facilitators including Dutch national Cornelis Nicolaas Abraham Loos, they have constructed what investigators describe as an integrated predatory ecosystem that siphons hundreds of millions of dollars from one of Africa’s poorest nations.

    The scale of the operation is staggering. Euroamerica Energy currently controls more than eighty percent of crude cargoes exported from South Sudan in recent months, with two out of three shipments in November and three out of four in December flowing through channels that bypass every financial oversight mechanism in the country.

    No prepayments reach the Ministry of Finance. No records land at the Central Bank. The opacity is so complete that it directly contributed to the recent arrest of the Central Bank Governor, sources familiar with the matter confirmed.

    The architecture of this theft draws on a playbook perfected over decades in Libya, Yemen, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Cathay Petroleum was founded in March 2003 by a Chinese national operating between Hong Kong and Singapore with a specialty in crude oil trading from sanctioned or sensitive countries.

    The company first appeared in the early 2010s as what industry insiders call a sleeve, a shell company used by Arcadia Petroleum, the now-defunct London trading house that operated extensively in South Sudan, Yemen and Nigeria.

    Arcadia’s collapse in 2018 came amid allegations of massive internal fraud involving USD 349 million. Several former directors were accused of using shell companies, including Cathay Petroleum, to divert funds.

    The case was ultimately dismissed due to lack of evidence but the traders at the heart of those schemes simply moved on.

    Some joined Glencore, the Swiss commodities giant that later publicly admitted paying bribes in South Sudan and faced corruption charges in Cameroon and the DRC.

    When Glencore exited South Sudan under the weight of scandal, those same traders migrated to Cathay Petroleum, bringing with them not just expertise but entire networks of fixers and intermediaries.

    This is where Idris Taha enters the picture.

    The Managing Director of Euroamerica Energy holds both British and German passports and has spent his career in what intelligence analysts describe as grey zones.

    He began in Libya in the 1990s during the embargo years, working through the oil for medicine programme that was systematically corrupted by parallel networks.

    After the fall of Gaddafi in 2011, Taha shifted to Iran, managing large contracts with the United Arab Emirates until those relationships collapsed amid accusations of deception.

    Now persona non grata in the Emirates, he operates primarily between Turkey, where he partners with BGN, and the United Kingdom.

    Taha’s resume reads like a catalogue of commodity trading scandals.

    He previously represented Trafigura in South Sudan before that company fled the country following its own bribery scandal.

    He then joined Litasco, the trading arm of Russian oil giant Lukoil, whose withdrawal from South Sudan left behind an unpaid debt of USD 90 million.

    Through it all, Taha cultivated relationships with South Sudanese officials, particularly Benjamin Bol Mel, the former Vice President dismissed in mid-November, and General Manasa Machar, who oversees Security and Compliance at the Ministry of Petroleum.

    The predation operates on two levels simultaneously. On the surface, Euroamerica and Cathay simply capture cargoes through political connections and sell them at manipulated prices that shortchange the South Sudanese state.

    But the more insidious theft happens upstream through the cost oil mechanism, a system designed to allow oil companies to recoup exploration and production expenses before the government receives its share.

    In theory, cost oil is a standard arrangement. In practice, it has become a vehicle for organized overbilling on a breathtaking scale.

    Oil service companies linked to Bol Mel, Loos and Taha charge up to three times standard prices for drilling and services, knowing the cost oil system will reimburse every inflated dollar before a single cent reaches public coffers.

    A well that should cost USD 20 million is billed at USD 100 million and the state absorbs the entire loss. There is no ceiling on these costs and no meaningful verification.

    The system structurally incentivizes theft.

    Cornelis Loos has been in South Sudan for over seven years serving as a close associate of Bol Mel and a key collaborator with General Manasa Machar.

    He manages money laundering operations through Dubai and has handled UAE real estate assets on behalf of the former Vice President.

    Sources describe him as a central facilitator of opaque financial flows, the man who makes the mechanics of corruption work smoothly across jurisdictions and banking systems.

    The family nature of the network adds another layer of opacity.

    Because Idris Taha faces travel restrictions in certain jurisdictions, his son Mahmoud Taha conducts meetings on his father’s behalf, regularly interfacing with Benjamin Bol Mel and other South Sudanese officials.

    The arrangement allows the elder Taha to remain in the shadows while his son serves as the public face of Euroamerica’s operations.

    What makes this network particularly dangerous is its institutional depth.

    This is not a simple case of officials taking bribes.

    It is a complete capture of the country’s primary revenue stream by a syndicate with decades of experience evading sanctions, manipulating markets and exploiting weak governance.

    The traders at Cathay Petroleum learned their craft at Arcadia and Glencore, companies that pioneered aggressive trading in frontier markets.

    Idris Taha built his career navigating embargoes in Libya and Iran.

    Loos provides the financial infrastructure to move money across borders without detection. Bol Mel and Manasa Machar provide political protection and access.

    The system works because everyone profits except the South Sudanese people. Cathay gets cargoes at favorable terms.

    Euroamerica controls allocation and captures the margin between real costs and inflated bills. Service companies charge triple rates.

    Officials receive payments through offshore structures.

    The money flows through Dubai, Turkey, the UK and various shell companies while South Sudan’s treasury remains empty and its people endure poverty despite sitting atop significant oil reserves.

    The recent surge in volumes allocated to Cathay Petroleum represents the final phase of network consolidation.

    After years of building relationships and positioning assets, the syndicate now controls the majority of the country’s crude exports through structures designed for maximum opacity.

    There are no prepayments that would create a paper trail.

    No audits that might reveal the true scale of overbilling.

    No meaningful oversight from financial institutions that have either been captured or deliberately bypassed.

    International investigators familiar with commodity trading patterns say the red flags are impossible to ignore.

    The sudden dominance of a previously minor player. The historical continuity with networks known for sanctions evasion.

    The synergy between trading companies, service providers, intermediaries and political figures.

    The complete absence of financial transparency.

    The inflation of costs to levels that defy economic logic.

    The routing of funds through jurisdictions known for lax enforcement of money laundering controls.

    South Sudan has been bled by conflict, mismanagement and corruption since independence but this represents something more systematic and more sophisticated than the typical looting that afflicts resource-rich African nations.

    This is infrastructure-level theft, the capture of an entire export system by a transnational network with the expertise to keep it running indefinitely.

    The traders involved have operated successfully in Libya under Gaddafi, in Yemen during civil war, in Sudan under sanctions and in multiple jurisdictions where Glencore faced prosecution.

    They know how to structure deals that resist investigation.

    They know which officials to cultivate and how to compensate them discreetly.

    They know which banks and jurisdictions will look the other way.

    For South Sudan, the implications are catastrophic. Oil revenues that should fund basic services, infrastructure and development instead disappear into offshore accounts.

    The cost oil mechanism that should help develop petroleum resources has become a vehicle for systematic overbilling that ensures the state never sees meaningful returns.

    The Ministry of Finance and Central Bank have been effectively cut out of the export process, unable to track revenues or verify that the country receives fair value for its resources.

    The dismissal of Benjamin Bol Mel in mid-November suggests that some elements within the South Sudanese government recognize the severity of the crisis but removing one official does little to dismantle a network this entrenched.

    Idris Taha continues to operate freely from his bases in Turkey and the UK. Cathay Petroleum continues to lift cargoes.

    Loos remains in the country facilitating financial flows.

    General Manasa Machar retains his position overseeing security and compliance at the Ministry of Petroleum, a role that provides crucial protection for the entire operation.

    The international community has largely failed to act despite clear evidence of massive corruption in South Sudan’s oil sector.

    Glencore faced consequences for its admitted bribery but the traders who implemented those schemes simply moved to new employers and continued the same practices.

    Arcadia collapsed under fraud allegations but the networks it built remain intact, now operating through Cathay Petroleum.

    Trafigura and Litasco withdrew from South Sudan but Idris Taha, who worked for both companies, simply shifted to his own vehicle and expanded his control.

    What the Cathay Petroleum and Euroamerica Energy network represents is the evolution of resource theft into a professional discipline practiced by specialists who move seamlessly between companies, countries and commodities.

    They bring with them not just personal contacts but entire methodologies for circumventing oversight, manipulating pricing and extracting wealth from weak states.

    They understand that in places like South Sudan, the combination of poor governance, conflict and international inattention creates opportunities for theft on a scale that would be impossible in more developed markets.

    The hundreds of millions of dollars that have already been diverted represent only the beginning.

    With more than eighty percent of current crude exports under their control and no meaningful oversight from financial authorities, the network is positioned to extract wealth from South Sudan for years to come.

    Every inflated service contract, every underpriced cargo sale, every payment routed through Dubai or offshore structures represents money that will never reach hospitals, schools or infrastructure.

    The human cost of this corruption is measured in development that never happens, in services that are never provided, in a generation of South Sudanese who will grow up in poverty while their country’s wealth flows to Hong Kong, London, Dubai and Ankara.

    Kenya Insights attempted to reach Cathay Petroleum, Euroamerica Energy, Idris Taha and Cornelis Loos for comment.

    None responded to requests.

    The South Sudanese Ministry of Petroleum declined to comment on specific companies or individuals but said in a statement that it is committed to transparency in the oil sector and is working with international partners to strengthen oversight.

    That statement rings hollow given that the ministry’s own Security and Compliance chief, General Manasa Machar, is identified by multiple sources as a key collaborator in the network.

    The story of Cathay Petroleum and Euroamerica Energy is ultimately a story about impunity.

    It demonstrates that for those with the right expertise and connections, stealing from the world’s poorest countries carries minimal risk and generates enormous rewards.

    The traders involved have spent decades perfecting their craft in sanctioned and conflict-affected markets.

    They know that even when caught, as Glencore was, the consequences are manageable.

    Fines are paid from corporate accounts.

    A few executives might face charges. But the networks survive, the traders move on and the theft continues under new corporate names.

    South Sudan cannot afford this.

    Already one of the world’s youngest and poorest nations, it needs every dollar of oil revenue to build the basic infrastructure of statehood.

    Instead, those dollars are disappearing into a sophisticated theft machine operated by some of the world’s most experienced commodity traders in partnership with corrupt officials.

    Until international law enforcement and financial regulators treat this systematic looting with the seriousness it deserves, the bleeding will continue and South Sudan’s oil wealth will remain a curse rather than a blessing for its people.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • Museveni Brands Kenyan Activists ‘Riot Experts’ After 38-Day Detention

    Museveni Brands Kenyan Activists ‘Riot Experts’ After 38-Day Detention

    NAIROBI, Kenya Nov 9 – Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has accused two Kenyan activists, Bob Njagi and Nicholas Oyoo, of being “experts in organizing riots,” claiming they were arrested on intelligence reports linking them to plans to incite violence in the country.

    Museveni alleged the duo had ties to opposition leader Bobi Wine and were suspected of planning anti-government protests.

    “We have good intelligence and we arrested the two Kenyans because they are experts in riots,” Museveni said during a talk show on Uganda’s state broadcaster UBC.

    Njagi and Oyoo were released on November 7, 2025 after spending 38 days in custody in Uganda.

    Njagi on Saturday revealed that they were subjected to inhumane treatment and torture while in detention before being handed over to Kenyan authorities.

    “Thirty-eight days of abduction was not easy. We didn’t think we would have come out alive. We had been abducted by the military. We will release the details in a short while after we some get medical attention. we have not eaten for some fourteen days and it has been difficult,” Njagi stated.

    The activists went missing in Uganda on October 1, 2025 after joining Wine’s campaign.

    Their release came after sustained diplomatic efforts between Kenya and Uganda, spearheaded by Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi and supported by regional human rights groups.

    In a joint statement, VOCAL Africa, the Law Society of Kenya (LSK), and Amnesty International Kenya condemned the activists’ reported torture and demanded accountability from Ugandan authorities.

    “Enforced disappearances and torture have no place in our region. We demand a transparent investigation and justice for Bob and Nicholas,” the groups said.

    They further urged both governments to uphold human rights obligations, warning that continued persecution of activists threatens regional cooperation and civic freedoms in East Africa.

  • At Least 240 Charged With Treason After Tanzania Election Violence

    At Least 240 Charged With Treason After Tanzania Election Violence

    A Tanzanian court has charged at least 240 people with treason following last week’s deadly election protests.

    President Samia Suluhu Hassan was declared the winner of the election with 98% of the vote, but the opposition – which was barred from contesting – denounced the poll as a sham.

    Security forces clashed with those protesting against the vote and, according to various sources, hundreds were killed. The authorities have downplayed the scale of the violence and maintained the election was free and fair.

    Many people were arrested and have now been charged with treason at a court in the economic capital of Dar es Salaam. They were not been asked to enter a plea in court.

    According to a charge sheet seen by the BBC, the defendants are accused of inciting demonstrations with the intention of obstructing the election.

    The defendants could receive the death penalty if found guilty. However, in Tanzania, the majority of those sentenced to death eventually have their sentence commuted to life in jail.

    The East African nation’s last execution took place in the 1990s.

    Among those charged on Friday was prominent Tanzanian businesswoman Jenifer Jovin.

    She has been accused of encouraging protesters to buy gas masks in order to protect themselves from the police’s tear gas.

    The defendants also include social media influencers. The court has been adjourned until 19 November.

    During her inauguration speech, President Samia condemned the violence and also blamed foreigners for stoking the unrest.

    It has left many Kenyans in Tanzania fearful for their safety after being reportedly targeted in the brutal crackdown – and has prompted Kenya’s Foreign Minister Musalia Mudavadi to ask his Tanzanian counterpart that their safety be guaranteed.

    During a phone conversation, Mudavadi said he had told his Tanzanian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Thabit Kombo that concerns would be “addressed through the established diplomatic and consular channels”.

    But he reaffirmed “the importance of safeguarding the rights, safety, and dignity” of Kenyans living in Tanzania.

    In May, Mudavadi had said that about 250,000 Kenyans lived, worked or did business in Tanzania.

    Earlier a Tanzanian police spokesman said the country had intelligence that some foreigners had crossed the border through illegal points “with the intention to commit crimes, including causing unrest”.

    Several families in Kenya have expressed concern for the safety of their relatives in Tanzania, following reports that some Kenyans have been killed, injured, or detained, while others are nursing injuries allegedly inflicted by Tanzanian security officers.

    John Ogutu, a Kenyan teacher working in Dar es Salaam, was shot dead by police while on his way to buy food, his older sister told the BBC.

    But rights groups say his body can not be traced for repatriation and burial.

    On Tuesday, a doctor at Muhimbili Hospital in Dar es Salaam told the BBC that vehicles marked “Municipal Burial Services” had been collecting bodies of those believed to have died in the protests.

    Kenya’s foreign affairs ministry has now asked relatives of Kenyans who may be in distress in Tanzania to share their names, addresses and emergency contacts.

    Reports say many Kenyans, especially those working in private schools, are now fleeing Tanzania after the government warned employers not to engage people without work permits.

    Election observers say the polls fell short of democratic standards, but the government insists the election was fair and transparent.

    President Samia faced little opposition with key rival candidates either imprisoned or barred from running.

    Her inauguration ceremony was held at a military parade ground in the capital, Dodoma, instead of a stadium as in previous years. It was closed to the public but was shown live on state TV.

    She initially came into office in 2021 as Tanzania’s first female president following the death of President John Magufuli – and was initially praised for easing political repression, but the political space has since narrowed.

    Tanzania and Kenya, which are both part of the Economic African Community, have experienced periodic political and economic tensions.

    In May diplomatic relations were strained over Tanzania’s treatment of Kenyans who had gone to Dar es Salaam to observe the treason trial of opposition leader Tundu Lissu.

    Several of them were deported while prominent Kenyan activist Boniface Mwangi, along with Ugandan activist Agather Atuhaire, went missing and were later reported to have been tortured and sexually mistreated.

  • Tanzania Lost Sh30.7 Billion in The Election- Linked Internet Shutdown

    Tanzania Lost Sh30.7 Billion in The Election- Linked Internet Shutdown

    Tanzania’s economy has lost more than $238 million (Sh30.7 billion) due to recent election-related internet disruptions and the continued suspension of social media platform X, digital rights organisation Paradigm Initiative (PIN) has revealed.

    In a statement, PIN noted that the Tanzanian government’s decision to shut down the internet during the country’s October 29 general elections and its ongoing restrictions on X have caused widespread economic harm, which has disrupted trade, productivity and access to online services.

    Citing data from the NetBlocks Cost of Shutdown Tool (COST), PIN reported that the five-day nationwide internet blackout, between October 29 and November 3, cost Tanzania about $72 million (Sh9.3 billion), translating to around $13.8 million(Sh1.8 million) a day.

    Further, PIN noted that the ongoing suspension of X (formerly Twitter) since May 21, 169 days ago, has set back Tanzania an additional $165.8 million (Sh21.4 billion), which translates to roughly $1 million (Sh129.2 million) per day.

    “Combined economic loss translates to over $238 million (Sh 30.7 billion) in direct losses to productivity, trade, and digital services,” said PIN.

    “These disruptions are economically devastating and deeply damaging to digital rights,” the group added, noting that the losses are also affecting health, education, security coordination and mobile payments.

    The group added that although internet access was restored on November 3, many users still experience slow speeds and restricted access in some areas, warning that such disruptions undermine trust in Tanzania’s digital economy and may deter investors.

    “Every shutdown chips away at trust, investment, and human potential,” said Gbenga Sesan, Executive Director of Paradigm Initiative.

    “Governments must realise that in today’s world, connectivity is the foundation of opportunity. Shutting down the internet silences citizens, stalls economies, and sets entire nations back.”

    PIN also criticised the Tanzanian government for defying regional and international human rights standards, including Articles 9 and 22 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which protect freedom of expression and the right to development.

    The group likewise referenced Resolution 580 of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which calls on governments to ensure unrestricted access to the internet during election periods.

    “PIN calls on the Government of Tanzania to comply with human rights by immediately restoring internet access to X and all restricted platforms and ceasing further internet or platform disruptions, especially during democratic processes,” the group said.

    It also urged Tanzanian authorities to ensure that internet service providers (ISPs) in the country maintain transparency whenever they are ordered to disrupt services.

    President Samia Suluhu Hassan.
    President Samia Suluhu Hassan.
  • President Ruto Congratulates Suluhu On Re-Election As Tanzanian President

    President Ruto Congratulates Suluhu On Re-Election As Tanzanian President

    NAIROBI, Kenya, Nov 3 – President William Ruto has congratulated Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan on her re-election, even as he emphasised the need to uphiold peace and the rule of law.

    In his message, President Ruto urged Tanzanian citizens and political leaders to embrace dialogue and tolerance even as reports indicated that hundreds of people were killed during the post-election period.

    “Kenya and Tanzania share deep historical ties and common aspirations for the prosperity and stability of our peoples anchored in our shared history and our joint membership in the East African Community,” he stated.

    He reaffirmed Kenya’s commitment to strengthening bilateral relations with Tanzania and deepening collaboration within the East African Community (EAC).

    Hundreds of people have been killed in Tanzania during three days of protests following Wednesday’s general election, the country’s main opposition party has said.

    The death toll varies, and a nationwide internet shutdown is making it difficult to verify the numbers.

    While a spokesperson from the opposition Chadema party told AFP news agency that “around 700” people had been killed in clashes with security forces, a diplomatic source in Tanzania told the BBC there was credible evidence that at least 500 people had died.

  • Trump Issues War Ultimatum To Nigeria Over Christian Killings

    Trump Issues War Ultimatum To Nigeria Over Christian Killings

    US President Donald Trump on Saturday said he has asked the Defence Department to prepare for possible “fast” military action in Nigeria if the West African nation fails to crack down on the killing of Christians.

    The US government will also immediately stop all aid and assistance to Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and top oil producer, Trump said in a post on Truth Social.

    If the United States sends in military forces, it would go in “‘guns-a-blazing,’ to completely wipe out the Islamic Terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities,” Trump wrote, without providing any evidence of specifics about the treatment of Christians in Nigeria.

    Trump called Nigeria a “disgraced country” and warned its government must move quickly. “If we attack, it will be fast, vicious, and sweet, just like the terrorist thugs attack our CHERISHED Christians!” he wrote.

    Abuja had no immediate reaction to Trump’s threat of military action. The White House also had no immediate comment on the potential timing of any US military action.

    Although the US Department of Defence referred Reuters to the White House for comment on Trump’s threat, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth released a social media post of his own.

    “The Department of War is preparing for action,” Hegseth wrote on X. “Either the Nigerian Government protects Christians, or we will kill the Islamic Terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities.”

    Trump’s post on Nigeria came a day after his administration added Nigeria back to a “Countries of Particular Concern” list of nations that the US says have violated religious freedom. Other nations on the list include China, Myanmar, North Korea, Russia and Pakistan.

    Before Trump posted his attack threat, Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Tinubu earlier on Saturday pushed back against claims of religious intolerance and defended his country’s efforts to protect religious freedom.

    “The characterisation of Nigeria as religiously intolerant does not reflect our national reality, nor does it take into consideration the consistent and sincere efforts of the government to safeguard freedom of religion and beliefs for all Nigerians,” Tinubu said in a statement, citing “constitutional guarantees to protect citizens of all faiths.”

    Nigeria’s Foreign Ministry, in a separate statement, vowed to keep fighting violent extremism and said it hoped Washington would remain a close ally, saying it “will continue to defend all citizens, irrespective of race, creed, or religion. Like America, Nigeria has no option but to celebrate the diversity that is our greatest strength.”

    The US military footprint in West Africa was significantly diminished when about 1,000 troops withdrew from Niger last year. While the US sometimes has small groups of troops in the region to take part in drills, the largest US military base on the continent is in East Africa in Djibouti, which hosts over 5,000 troops and is used for operations in the region.

    Trump put Nigeria on the ‘concern list’ during his first term

     

    Trump had designated Nigeria a country of concern during his first term in the White House. His Democratic successor, Joe Biden, removed it from the US State Department list in 2021.

    On Friday, Trump said “thousands of Christians” were being killed in Nigeria by radical Islamists, but offered no details.

    Nigeria, which has 200 ethnic groups practising Christianity, Islam and traditional religions, has a long history of peaceful coexistence, but it has also seen flare-ups of violence among groups, often exacerbated by ethnic divisions or conflict over scarce resources.

    The extremist Islamist armed group Boko Haram has also terrorised northeast Nigeria, an insurgency that has killed tens of thousands of people over the past 15 years. Human rights experts have said most Boko Haram victims have been Muslims.

    US lawmakers such as Representative Tom Cole, a Republican who chairs the U.S. House of Representatives Appropriations Committee, hailed Trump’s move on Friday, citing what they called “the alarming and ongoing persecution of Christians across the country.”

    The committee’s fiscal 2026 national security appropriations bill included increased funding for international religious freedom programs and support for programs supporting communities in Nigeria targeted by extremist violence.

    Trump’s redesignation of Nigeria as a country of concern opens the door to a range of policy responses, such as sanctions or waivers, but they are not automatic.

    Some religious groups pressed Trump for the re-designation in a letter last month, according to a copy on the Hudson Institute think tank’s website.

    “Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria. Thousands of Christians are being killed. Radical Islamists are responsible for this mass slaughter,” Trump wrote without offering any specifics. He also called on the US House of Representatives Appropriations Committee to investigate.

  • Trump Threatens Military Action In Nigeria Over Killing Of Christians

    Trump Threatens Military Action In Nigeria Over Killing Of Christians

    US President Donald Trump has ordered the Pentagon to begin planning for potential military action in Nigeria as he steps up his criticism that the government is failing to rein in the persecution of Christians.

    “If the Nigerian government continues to allow the killing of Christians, the USA will immediately stop all aid and assistance to Nigeria, and may very well go into that now disgraced country, ‘guns-a-blazing’, to completely wipe out the Islamic terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities,” Mr Trump posted on social media.

    “I am hereby instructing our Department of War to prepare for possible action. If we attack, it will be fast, vicious, and sweet, just like the terrorist thugs attack our cherished Christians!”

    Bola Ahmed Tinubu says Nigeria opposes religious persecution and does not encourage it. (AP: Olamikan Gbemiga)
    Bola Ahmed Tinubu says Nigeria opposes religious persecution and does not encourage it. (AP: Olamikan Gbemiga)

    The warning of possible military action came after Nigeria’s President Bola Ahmed Tinubu earlier on Saturday pushed back on Mr Trump for designating the West African country “a country of particular concern” for allegedly failing to rein in the persecution of Christians.

    In a social media statement on Saturday, Mr Tinubu said the characterisation of Nigeria as a religiously intolerant country did not reflect the national reality.

    “Religious freedom and tolerance have been a core tenet of our collective identity and shall always remain so,” Mr Tinubu said.

    “Nigeria opposes religious persecution and does not encourage it. Nigeria is a country with constitutional guarantees to protect citizens of all faiths.”

    Mr Trump on Friday said Christianity was “facing an existential threat in Nigeria” and “radical Islamists” were “responsible for this mass slaughter”.

    Mr Trump’s comment came weeks after US Senator Ted Cruz urged Congress to designate Africa’s most populous country as a violator of religious freedom with claims of “Christian mass murder”.

    Nigeria’s population of 220 million is split almost equally between Christians and Muslims.

    The country has long faced insecurity from various fronts including the Boko Haram extremist group, which seeks to establish its radical interpretation of Islamic law and has also targeted Muslims it deems not Muslim enough.

    Attacks in Nigeria have varying motives. There are religiously motivated ones targeting both Christians and Muslims, clashes between farmers and herders over dwindling resources, communal rivalries, secessionist groups and ethnic clashes.

    While Christians are among those targeted, analysts say the majority of victims of armed groups are Muslims in Nigeria’s Muslim-majority north, where most attacks occur.

    Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Kimiebi Ebienfa reiterated the commitment of Nigeria to protect citizens of all religions.

    “The federal government of Nigeria will continue to defend all citizens, irrespective of race, creed, or religion,” Ebienfa said in a statement on Saturday.

    “Like America, Nigeria has no option but to celebrate the diversity that is our greatest strength.”

    Nigeria was placed on the country of particular concern list by the US for the first time in 2020 over what the State Department called “systematic violations of religious freedom”.

    The designation, which did not single out attacks on Christians, was lifted in 2023 in what observers saw as a way to improve ties between the countries ahead of then-Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit.

    AP

  • At Least 700 Dead in Tanzania’s Post-Election Protests, Opposition Says

    At Least 700 Dead in Tanzania’s Post-Election Protests, Opposition Says

    Hundreds of people have reportedly been killed in Tanzania after taking to the streets to protest this week’s presidential election, which saw the increasingly authoritarian incumbent, President Samia Suluhu Hassan, run unopposed for another term after her main challengers were jailed or barred from standing.

    Some 700 people have been killed in three days of election protests in Tanzania, the main opposition party said Friday, with protesters still on the streets in the midst of an internet blackout.

    “As we speak the figure for deaths in Dar (es Salaam) is around 350 and for Mwanza it is 200-plus. Added to figures from other places around the country, the overall figure is around 700,” John Kitoka, spokesman from the main opposition party Chadema, said.

    “The death toll could be much higher,” he warned, saying killings could be happening during the nighttime curfew.

    President Samia Suluhu Hassan, whose government is accused of a campaign of repression, had sought to cement her position and silence critics in her party in the virtually uncontested polls, with the main challengers either jailed or barred from standing.

    Wednesday’s election descended into chaos as huge crowds took to the streets of Dar es Salaam and other cities, tearing down her posters and attacking police and polling stations, leading to an internet shutdown and curfew.

    With foreign journalists largely banned from covering the election and a communications block entering its third day, information from the ground has been scarce.

    Chadema, which was barred from the election, said protesters were marching on the city centre in Dar es Salaam on Friday, met by a heavy police and army presence.

    A security source told AFP they were hearing reports of more than 500 dead, “maybe 700-800 in the whole country”, while Amnesty said it had received information of at least 100.

    Multiple hospitals and health clinics were too afraid to talk directly to reporters.

    Local news sites had not been updated since Wednesday, and Hassan has not commented on the unrest.

    The only official statement came from army chief Jacob Mkunda late Thursday who called the protesters “criminals”.

    Zanzibar ‘robbed’

    In Zanzibar, a tourist hotspot, Hassan’s ruling party had already been declared winner of the local vote on Thursday.

    The opposition party, ACT-Wazalendo, rejected the result, saying: “They have robbed the people of Zanzibar of their voice… The only solution to deliver justice is through a fresh election.”

    A senior party official said ballot boxes had been stuffed, people had been allowed to vote multiple times without ID and that their election observers had been kicked out of counting rooms.

    The ruling party (Chama Cha Mapinduzi: CCM) was due to give a press conference later in the day.

    At a meeting place for opposition supporters on Zanzibar, there was dismay and fear.

    “There has never been a credible election since 1995,” said a 70-year-old man, referring to Tanzania’s first multi-party vote.

    None of those interviewed gave their names.

    “We are afraid of speaking because they might come to our houses and pick us up,” said one.

    Crackdown

    Hassan has faced opposition from parts of the army and allies of her iron-fisted predecessor, John Magufuli, since she took over upon his death in 2021, analysts say.

    They said she wanted an emphatic victory to cement her position, and the authorities banned the main opposition party, Chadema, and put its leader on trial for treason.

    In the run-up to the vote, rights groups condemned a “wave of terror” in the east African nation, including a string of high-profile abductions that escalated in the final days.

    Much public anger has been directed at Hassan’s son, Abdul Halim Hafidh Ameir, accused of overseeing the crackdown.

    ACT-Wazalendo was allowed to contest the local election in Zanzibar, but its candidate was barred from competing against Hassan on the mainland.

    (FRANCE 24 with AFP)

  • Police in Tanzania Impose Nationwide Curfew Following Tense Election Day

    Police in Tanzania Impose Nationwide Curfew Following Tense Election Day

    Internet services have also been shut down, while several people have been injured during protests.

    Internet watchdog NetBlocks reported a “nationwide disruption to internet connectivity” in a statement on X.

    Earlier, police in Tanzania’s main city, Dar es Salaam, fired tear gas to disperse opposition supporters protesting against the country’s general election.

    Several people have been injured in the confrontation after groups of protesters gathered along major highways to demand electoral reforms and free political activity.

    Protesters lit fires on roads, vandalised buses, and caused extensive damage to bus terminals and other public infrastructure.

    “We are tired… We want an independent electoral commission so that every Tanzanian can choose the leader they want,” a protester told the BBC.

    Reports say that voter turnout in Dar es Salaam was low when polls opened on Wednesday, with many hesitant to show up amid safety concerns.

    A police spokesperson had earlier assured the public there was no threat to their safety, saying “people should come out and vote”, according to a message posted on social media.

    More than 37 million registered voters are eligible to cast their ballots in the presidential and parliamentary election at over 99,000 polling stations.

    Polls opened at 04:00 GMT (07:00 local time) and close at 13:00 GMT (16:00 local time). Results are expected within 72 hours, according to the electoral commission.

    The vote comes amid divisions among opposition parties – some boycotting the poll, accusing the process of favouring the ruling party, Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM). This is Tanzania’s seventh general election since the return of multiparty democracy in 1992.

    President Samia Suluhu Hassan, Africa’s only female head of state, is seeking a new term as 17 candidates vie for the presidency.

    The election is expected to be a shoo-in for President Samia Suluhu and her ruling party, as the main opposition leader is in in jail on treason charges, which he denies, and his party has boycotted the vote.

    Ahead of the election, rights groups condemned government repression, with Amnesty International citing a “wave of terror” involving enforced disappearances, torture, and extrajudicial killings of opposition figures.

    The government rejected the claims, and officials said the election would be free and fair. Samia came into office in 2021 as Tanzania’s first female president following the death of President John Magufuli.

    She was initially praised for easing political repression under her predecessor, but the political space has since narrowed, with her government accused of targeting critics through arrests and a wave of abductions.

    The electoral body is expected to announce results in three days after voting ends.

  • A Coronation Not A Contest – Tanzania’s First Female President Faces Little Opposition

    A Coronation Not A Contest – Tanzania’s First Female President Faces Little Opposition

    With no heavyweight opposition candidates cleared to compete in Wednesday’s election, many Tanzanians feel the vote is less like a contest and more like a coronation for President Samia Suluhu Hassan, as she faces her first presidential election.

    The 65-year-old became the East African nation’s first female head of state after the death in 2021 of sitting President John Magufuli. He was admired on the one hand for his no-nonsense drive to stamp out corruption but criticised on the other for his authoritarian clampdown on dissent and controversial attitude towards the Covid pandemic.

    President Samia, who had been vice-president, seemed like a breath of fresh air – and with her warmer and friendlier style, she initiated reforms that seemed to represent a radical departure from her predecessor’s policies.

    Her four Rs policy – “reconciliation, resilience, reform and rebuilding” – reopened Tanzania to foreign investors, restored donor relations and mollified the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank.

    “She made a difference, the lost relationship between Tanzania and international organisations such as World Bank was restored,” political analyst Mohammed Issa told the BBC.

    But over the last two years or so, the political space has drastically shrunk – and the targeting of government critics and opposition voices is said to be more ruthless now than it ever was under Magufuli, with regular abductions and killings now reported.

    “Samia came in with a conciliatory tone, but now she has become bold and makes tough decisions that many did not expect from her,” said Mr Issa.

    “She is now widely blamed for some things like abductions, killings, repression of opposition and other issues on security.”

    This is reflected in reports by Freedom House, a US-based democracy and human rights advocacy group, which ranked Tanzania as “partly free” in 2020 and “not free” last year.

    The government has not commented on the allegations.

    Samia’s CCM has won every election since the reintroduction of multi-party democracy in 1992, but the campaigns are usually vibrant with robust debate between the rival parties.

    While the electoral commission has cleared 17 presidential candidates to stand this time, the main opposition party, Chadema, is barred with its leader, Tundu Lissu, currently on trial for treason.

    He had been calling for electoral reforms before his arrest in April – and the party is now urging its supporters to boycott the poll.

    His deputy, John Heche, was also arrested last week – and told the BBC just before his detention that President Samia’s so-called reforms were hollow: “Yes, rallies were allowed again, but today Chadema can’t do its mandate because the promises were fake.”

    Meanwhile, presidential hopeful Luhana Mpina, from the second largest opposition party, ACT Wazalendo, has also been disqualified – twice.

    He had managed to get his candidacy reinstated by the High Court after he was barred over a procedural issue – but when the Attorney General appealed last month, the electoral commission decided to uphold the disqualification.

    This leaves smaller opposition parties like Chaumma and CUF in the race, but in reality there is no chance of them stopping Samia winning her first personal mandate.

    “The ruling party’s control, exclusion of the opposition and institutional bias undermine electoral credibility. Limited civic space and low voter engagement further weaken inclusiveness,” said political analyst Nicodemus Minde in a recent report for the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) think-tank.

    This has left some would-be voters, like Dar es Salaam resident Godfrey Lusana, despondent.

    “We do not have an election without a strong opposition. The electoral system is not independent. We already know who will win. I can’t waste time to vote,” he told the BBC. “If the electoral commission was really independent, I would have voted.”

    In contrast to the mainland, there is a vibrant campaign on the semi-autonomous archipelago of Zanzibar
    In contrast to the mainland, there is a vibrant campaign on the semi-autonomous archipelago of Zanzibar

    This is in stark contrast to the buzzing campaign on Tanzania’s semi-autonomous archipelago of Zanzibar – from where President Samia originally hails.

    The islanders elect their own regional president and incumbent Hussein Mwinyi of the CCM is seeking another term, but faces stiff competition from ACT-Wazalendo’s Othman Masoud – who has been serving as his deputy in a unity administration.

    On the campaign trail on the mainland, President Samia has capitalised on the initial praise she received for her motherly approach – seeking to govern through dialogue rather than decree.

    This earned her the nickname “Mama Samia” – and at her rallies she has been promising to bring widespread development through better infrastructure, health and education.

    Many women, especially those in rural communities, see her as a stabilising force.

    “She brings dignity, we young women look up to her. We feel her presence as the president and that gives us confidence that we can be reliable to our communities now and in the future,” first-time voter Queen Castoric from the northern city of Tanga told the BBC.

    But some women in urban areas, like Celina Ponsiana, who will also be casting her ballot for the first time in Dar es Salaam, are more equivocal: “Leadership isn’t only about tone.

    “I believe the president has a task to do, first on unemployment. She has been supporting some but many still need help,” she said.

    Another young woman in Morogoro, near Dar es Salaam, said she supported the president but refused to give her name to the BBC in case she faced a backlash from her contemporaries.

    “Samia made us believe women can lead. I would love to say more, but many youth don’t talk positively about her,” she said.

    Young people make up the majority of Tanzania’s 37.7 million people registered voters – and there is anger from some over the president’s silence on issues like the shocking abductions.

    And while some give credit to President Samia for stabilising the economy, in some quarters there is even nostalgia for Magufuli given the rising reports of corruption.

    Her tougher approach of late may come down to several issues.

    In a traditionally male-dominated society, she has faced problems asserting her authority. At recent rallies she has been reminding voters who is boss: “Don’t forget I am chief of the defence forces.”

    She may also feel undermined by colleagues. Within the CCM, there was some opposition to the fact that she became the party’s presidential candidate unchallenged.

    President Samia's posters dominate in Dar es Salaam
    President Samia’s posters dominate in Dar es Salaam

    One senior party member who criticised her automatic candidacy – Humphrey Polepole – has since been abducted in mysterious circumstances.

    There is also a suggestion that she has in fact become the pawn of a powerful network of business tycoons and other influential CCM backers, known colloquially as Mtandao, according to Mr Minde in his ISS report.

    “Internal [CCM] party democracy has been stifled through an orchestrated move to make President Samia the sole candidate. While this has deepened divisions within the party, a façade of unity is being presented to the public,” he said.

    It is believed that Magufuli refused to take orders from the Mtandao, preferring to stick to his own anti-corruption agenda.

    Mr Minde warns that this has all contributed to a prevailing sense of fear in the East African nation. With the self-censorship of the media and the shrinking of political discourse, public debate has retreated to private conversations and social media.

    Analysts warn that such detachment, especially among young people, could hollow out Tanzania’s democracy further – and create problems down the road for President Samia should there not be a big turnout and if protests kick off.

    For Tito Magoti, a lawyer and young political activist, the demands remain simple.

    “We want a free Tanzania where anyone has the freedom to speak,” he told the BBC.

    “The freedom of movement and the freedom to do anything they wish.”

  • Madagascar’s New Military Ruler Says He Will Be Sworn In as President on Friday

    Madagascar’s New Military Ruler Says He Will Be Sworn In as President on Friday

    Madagascar’s new military ruler, Colonel Michael Randrianirina, said he will be sworn in as president on Friday, after the African Union suspended the membership of the island nation following a coup to oust President Andry Rajoelina.

    Rajoelina, whom lawmakers impeached after he fled abroad during the weekend, has condemned the takeover and refused to step down despite youth-led Gen Z protests asking him to quit and widespread defections in the security forces.

    Randrianirina said in a statement late on Wednesday that the High Constitutional Court would perform the ceremony.

    “Colonel Michael Randrianirina will be sworn in as the President for the Refoundation of the Republic of Madagascar during a formal hearing,” he said.

    The African Union announced on Wednesday that the bloc had suspended Madagascar with immediate effect following the coup, and called for the restoration of civilian-led governance as well as elections.

    Suspension by the 55-member bloc carries political weight and could isolate the country’s new leadership.

    Randrianirina said earlier that the military had taken power and dissolved all institutions except the lower house of parliament, or National Assembly.

    He also said that a committee led by the military would rule for up to two years alongside a transitional government before organising new elections.

    Randrianirina was a commander in the elite CAPSAT army unit that played a key role in the 2009 coup that brought Rajoelina to power but broke ranks with him last week, urging soldiers not to fire on protesters.

    Madagascar’s population of about 30 million people has an average age of less than 20 years. Three-quarters of the people live in poverty. Between its independence in 1960 and 2020, GDP per capita plunged 45%, according to the World Bank.

  • Cameroon Opposition’s Tchiroma Claims Election Victory, Urges Biya to Concede

    Cameroon Opposition’s Tchiroma Claims Election Victory, Urges Biya to Concede

    GAROUA, Oct 14 (Reuters) – Cameroon opposition candidate Issa Tchiroma declared victory late on Monday in the country’s October 12 presidential election, urging President Paul Biya to accept defeat and “honour the truth of the ballot box”.

    “Our victory is clear. It must be respected,” Tchiroma said in a speech on his Facebook page from his hometown of Garoua in the north of the Central African state. “The people have chosen. And this choice must be respected.”

    Tchiroma, a former government spokesperson and employment minister in his late seventies, broke ranks with Biya earlier this year and mounted a campaign that drew large crowds and endorsements from a coalition of opposition parties and civic groups.

    Without naming Tchiroma, Biya’s Cameroon People’s Democratic Movement (CPDM) on Tuesday condemned the self-declared victory as a “grotesque hoax,” adding that only the Constitutional Council is enabled to proclaim results.

    It is “an inadmissible act in a state governed by the rule of law,” CPDM spokesperson Jacques Fame Ndongo said in a statement.

    The Minister of Territorial Administration also criticized Tchiroma in a separate statement and promised to maintain public order and ensure the protection of people and their property during the electoral period.

    Biya, 92, the world’s oldest serving head of state, is seeking an eighth term after 43 years in power. Analysts had expected his control over state institutions and a fragmented opposition to give him an edge in the election, despite growing public discontent over economic stagnation and insecurity.

    Cameroonian President Paul Biya, 92, who is seeking an eighth term, casts his ballot while his wife Chantal watches during the presidential election in Yaounde, Cameroon October 12, 2025. REUTERS
    Cameroonian President Paul Biya, 92, who is seeking an eighth term, casts his ballot while his wife Chantal watches during the presidential election in Yaounde, Cameroon October 12, 2025. REUTERS

    Tchiroma praised voters for defying intimidation and staying at polling stations late into the night to protect their ballots.

    “I also thank candidates who have already sent me their congratulations and recognised the will of the people,” Tchiroma said.

    “We have placed the regime before its responsibilities: either it shows greatness by accepting the truth of the ballot box, or it chooses to plunge the country into turmoil that will leave an indelible scar in the heart of our nation,” he warned.

    Cameroon’s electoral law allows results to be published and posted at polling stations, but final tallies must be validated by the Constitutional Council, which has until October 26 to announce the outcome.

    Tchiroma said he would soon release a region-by-region breakdown of vote tallies compiled from publicly posted results.

    “This victory is not that of one man, nor of one party. It is the victory of a people,” he said.

    He also called on the military, security forces and government administrators to remain loyal to the “republic, not the regime”.

    Minister of Territorial Administration Paul Atanga Nji warned over the weekend that any unilateral publication of results would be considered “high treason.”

    Cameroon’s single-round electoral system awards the presidency to the candidate with the most votes. More than 8 million people were registered to vote in the election.

    Presidential candidate Issa Tchiroma Bakary of the Cameroon National Salvation Front (FSNC) departs after casting his vote on the day of Cameroon’s presidential election at the polling station of Ecole Maternelle de Foulbere in Garoua, Cameroon
    Presidential candidate Issa Tchiroma Bakary of the Cameroon National Salvation Front (FSNC) departs after casting his vote on the day of Cameroon’s presidential election at the polling station of Ecole Maternelle de Foulbere in Garoua, Cameroon
  • Madagascar’s Top Court Invites Army Colonel to Serve As President After Power Grab

    Madagascar’s Top Court Invites Army Colonel to Serve As President After Power Grab

    NAIROBI, Oct 14 (Reuters) – Madagascar’s top court on Tuesday invited Colonel Michael Randrianirina, an army commander who declared the military had taken power after leading a mutiny backing Gen Z demonstrators, to serve as the country’s new president.

    The court said on its website that it took the decision because President Andry Rajoelina was unable to perform his duties and had left the country after widespread military defections in support of the protesters.

    It asked Randrianirina to organise new elections within 60 days.

    Colonel Michael Randrianirina arrives with members of the military to join protesters gathered outside the town hall on Independence Avenue during a nationwide youth-led demonstration
    Colonel Michael Randrianirina arrives with members of the military to join protesters gathered outside the town hall on Independence Avenue during a nationwide youth-led demonstration
  • Sentenced to Death in Congo, Ex-President Kabila Resurfaces in Nairobi to Convene Political Conclave

    Sentenced to Death in Congo, Ex-President Kabila Resurfaces in Nairobi to Convene Political Conclave

    NAIROBI—Former Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila has emerged from the shadows in Nairobi, convening a gathering of opposition figures just two weeks after being sentenced to death in absentia by a Congolese military court.

    The 54-year-old former leader, who ruled the vast Central African nation from 2001 to 2019, was found guilty of treason and crimes against peace by the military tribunal on September 30.

    Despite the verdict, Kabila has moved swiftly to reassert himself as a key player in Congolese politics, inviting several opposition leaders to the Kenyan capital for meetings that began on Monday.

    According to sources close to the former president, the Nairobi conclave represents an attempt to rebuild an opposition front against his successor, President Félix Tshisekedi.

    The gathering comes at a critical juncture, with the eastern DRC engulfed in conflict and political tensions running high in Kinshasa.

    “Kabila had already met several leaders in December 2024, in Addis Ababa, but the context has changed considerably since then,” a close associate told The Africa Report. “There is a need to rebuild an opposition front.”

    Among those accepting the invitation is Matata Ponyo Mapon, Kabila’s former prime minister, who himself faces a 10-year forced labour sentence for embezzlement handed down by the Constitutional Court in May. Ponyo’s party confirmed in August that he was officially in exile, though his location had remained undisclosed until now.

    Seth Kikuni, who ran in the December 2023 presidential election before endorsing opposition heavyweight Moïse Katumbi, has also confirmed his attendance. He will be joined by Franck Diongo, currently in exile in Belgium, and several figures from Kabila’s Front Commun pour le Congo political platform.

    The attendee list includes Néhémie Mwilanya Wilondja, Kabila’s former chief of staff; Raymond Tshibanda, the FCC’s crisis cell coordinator; former minister José Makila; and Richard Muyej, former governor of Lualaba province. Members of Kabila’s inner circle, including his adviser Kikaya Bin Karubi and Patient Sayiba Tambwe, are also expected to participate.

    However, the gathering has exposed divisions within the opposition. Katumbi, arguably the most prominent opposition leader, declined the invitation and will not send a representative. Delly Sesanga and Jean-Marc Kabund, both invited, have also opted not to attend.

    Martin Fayulu, another opposition heavyweight, told The Africa Report he had not been approached about the meeting. Those who declined said they were uncomfortable with the gathering being organized around Kabila in Nairobi.

    The former president’s reemergence follows months of strategic positioning. Between February and June, Kabila orchestrated a gradual return to the public eye through media statements and a controversial visit to Goma, the eastern city now under M23 rebel control.

    As calls for dialogue intensify among Tshisekedi’s opponents, Kabila appears intent on positioning himself as an indispensable intermediary between the political and military opposition. However, President Tshisekedi has made clear his unwillingness to engage with those he considers proxies for foreign aggressors.

    Speaking to the Congolese diaspora in Belgium on October 11, Tshisekedi drew a firm line. “To all those who speak of dialogue and present things in their own way, saying that we do not want dialogue, yes, we do not want that kind of dialogue,” he said. “We want a dialogue among Congolese who are all united against this aggression.”

    The Nairobi meeting comes as talks between Congolese authorities and the M23 are scheduled to resume this week in Doha, though prospects for meaningful internal political dialogue remain uncertain.

    Kabila’s death sentence, while largely symbolic given his presence outside Congolese jurisdiction, reflects the depth of animosity between him and his successor. The military court’s verdict marks an unprecedented legal action against a former head of state in the DRC and signals Tshisekedi’s determination to consolidate power ahead of future political battles.

    Kenya has in recent months emerged as a haven for several Congolese opposition figures, with Kabila having stayed in Nairobi multiple times this year. The country’s role as a neutral ground for political negotiations in the region continues, despite the sensitive nature of hosting figures wanted by neighboring governments.

    Whether Kabila’s Nairobi conclave succeeds in forging a unified opposition front remains to be seen. The notable absences suggest that even among Tshisekedi’s critics, rallying around a figure with a death sentence hanging over him may prove a bridge too far.

    Former DRC President Joseph Kabila arrives at a Nairobi venue for a meeting with Congolese opposition figures, his first public appearance since being sentenced to death in absentia by a military court in Kinshasa. (Photo: handout)
    Former DRC President Joseph Kabila arrives at a Nairobi venue for a meeting with Congolese opposition figures, his first public appearance since being sentenced to death in absentia by a military court in Kinshasa. (Photo: handout)
  • Mali Imposes $10,000 Visa Bond On US Visitors in Tit-for-Tat Move

    Mali Imposes $10,000 Visa Bond On US Visitors in Tit-for-Tat Move

    Mali has announced that US nationals visiting the West African country will be required to post a bond of up to $10,000 (£7,500) for business and tourist visas, in response to a similar requirement the Trump administration has imposed on its citizens.

    The US embassy in Mali said on Friday the fee had been introduced to reinforce Washington’s “commitment to protecting America’s borders and safeguarding US national security”.

    Mali’s foreign ministry said on Sunday the bond had been imposed unilaterally, and it had decided to “establish an identical visa programme” for US citizens.

    The visa policy shift comes despite moves to improve diplomatic relations between the two countries.

    In July, US officials visited Mali to discuss counterterrorism cooperation and economic partnerships, including potential access to Mali’s gold and lithium reserves.

    Relations deteriorated after a coup in Mali in 2021 led to Gen Assimi Goïta sweeping to power.

    He pivoted the West African state towards Russia in a bid to stem a growing insurgency by jihadists.

    He expelled French troops, and brought in mercenaries from Russia’s Wagner group, which is under Moscow’s defence ministry. They have since been replaced by Africa Corps.

    Last week, Burkina Faso’s military government refused to take in deportees from the US, as Washington suspended issuing visas in the West African nation.

    Foreign affairs minister Karamoko Jean-Marie Traoré questioned if the embassy’s decision was “blackmail” after he said he had rejected a US proposal to take in migrants from third countries.

    The Trump administration has turned to African countries as a destination to deport migrants to as part of its crackdown on immigration.

  • Madagascar Soldiers Join Protestors

    Madagascar Soldiers Join Protestors

    Groups of Madagascar soldiers joined thousands of protestors in the capital Saturday, AFP reporters said, after announcing they would refuse any orders to shoot demonstrators.

    Fresh youth-led demonstrations in Antananarivo drew large crowds in one of the biggest gatherings since a protest movement erupted on the Indian Ocean island on September 25.

    After police used stun grenades and tear gas to try to disperse the demonstrators, soldiers arrived at the heart of the gathering near the Lake Anosy area where they were welcomed with cheers.

    Protesters called out “Thank you!” to the soldiers, some of whom were waving Madagascar flags, the images showed.

    At a meeting at an army barracks on the outskirts of the city earlier, the soldiers said they would not take action against the protestors.

    “Let us join forces, military, gendarmes and police, and refuse to be paid to shoot our friends, our brothers and our sisters,” the soldiers at the base in Soanierana district said in a video posted on social media.

    They called on soldiers at the airport to “prevent all aircraft from taking off” and those in other camps to “refuse orders to shoot your friends”.

    “Close the gates and await our instructions,” they said. “Do not obey orders from your superiors. Point your weapons at those who order you to fire on your comrades-in-arms, because they will not take care of our families if we die.”

    The demonstrations on Saturday were the largest in several days in the youth-led movement that was sparked by anger over power and water shortages and evolved into a broader anti-government movement.

    It was unclear how many soldiers had joined the call on Saturday.

    In 2009, the military base in Soanierana led a mutiny in a popular uprising that brought the current president, Andry Rajoelina, to power.

    The newly appointed minister of the armed forces called on troops to “remain calm” in a press conference Saturday .

    “We call on our brothers who disagree with us to prioritise dialogue,” Minister General Deramasinjaka Manantsoa Rakotoarivelo said.

    “The Malagasy army remains a mediator and constitutes the nation’s last line of defence,” he said.

    Violent crackdown

    Several people were injured on Thursday as security forces dispersed protesters with tear gas, rubber bullets and armoured vehicles.

    Videos of police violence went viral on social media, including a video of one man being left unconscious on the ground after he was chased and severely beaten by security forces, which AFP reporters also witnessed.

    The United Nations on Friday reacted by calling on authorities to “desist from unnecessary force and to uphold the rights to free association and peaceful assembly”.

    The UN has said that at least 22 people were killed in the first days of the protests that started on 25 September at the call of a youth-led movement called “Gen Z”.

    President Andry Rajoelina has disputed the toll, saying on Wednesday that there were “12 confirmed deaths and all of these individuals were looters and vandals”.

    Rajoelina initially adopted a conciliatory tone and sacked his entire government in response to the protests.

    But he has since doubled down, appointing a military officer as prime minister on October 6 and picking the first members of his new cabinet from among the armed forces, public security and armed police, announcing that the country “no longer needs disturbances”.

    Among the world’s poorest countries, Madagascar has undergone frequent popular uprisings since independence in 1960, including mass protests in 2009 that forced then-president Marc Ravalomanana from power as the military installed Rajoelina for his first term.

    He won re-election in 2018 and again in 2023 in contested polls boycotted by the opposition.

  • Kenyan Activists Bob Njagi, Nicholas Oyoo Detained in Military Prison in Uganda, Lawyers Say

    Kenyan Activists Bob Njagi, Nicholas Oyoo Detained in Military Prison in Uganda, Lawyers Say

    Two Kenyan activists are being held at a military detention facility in Uganda following their arrest at a petrol station in eastern Uganda last week, according to court documents filed by their lawyers in Kampala.

    Bob Njagi and Nicholas Oyoo were arrested and taken away shortly after attending a political rally for presidential candidate Robert Kyagulanyi, widely known as Bobi Wine, who leads Uganda’s largest opposition party, the National Unity Platform.

    Lawyers from Kiiza & Mugisha Co Advocates have petitioned the Civil Division of the High Court in Kampala seeking orders to have the two men freed from detention, listing as respondents Uganda’s Chief of Defence Forces, the Chief of Defense Intelligence and Security, the Inspector General of Police, and the Attorney General.

    In an affidavit supporting the petition, Koffi Atinda, a colleague of Njagi who witnessed the incident, stated that the respondent’s military arrest and detention of the applicants at a detention facility in Mbuya since Wednesday, October 1, 2025, constituted incommunicado detention that was illegal and unlawful. Mbuya houses the Uganda Defence and Veterans Affairs ministry headquarters.

    Atinda stated that the applicants had been in illegal and incommunicado detention for more than 48 hours without trial or any charges being preferred against them.

    The activists, who are members of the African Movement and hold leadership positions in the FreeKenya Movement, had travelled to Uganda to show support for Bobi Wine, whom they also consider a personal friend .

    According to the affidavit, the activists were brutally arrested by men wielding guns and dressed in both military and civilian clothes at Starbex Petrol Station in Kaliro District in eastern Uganda, where they had parked their vehicle.

    They were taken away in a Toyota Hiace van commonly known as Drone at high speed to Mbuya.

    Atinda expressed concern that the detained activists could be subjected to torture and inhumane treatment at the hands of the military, which has been cited for torturing, harassing, and persecuting critics of President Museveni and his inner circle.

    By Monday evening, it remained unclear when the court would convene to hear the application for habeas corpus, although Uganda’s Constitution demands that matters of human rights should be fast-tracked.

    The Kenyan High Commission in Kampala issued a statement to Uganda’s Foreign Affairs ministry last Friday, inquiring about the whereabouts and situation of the activists following petitions from Vocal Africa and the families of the activists to Kenya’s Foreign Affairs ministry.

    It was unclear whether Uganda had responded.

    However, Ugandan police have denied any involvement in the arrests. Kituuma Rusoke, the police spokesperson, told media in Kampala on Monday that police had not registered any reports that two Kenyan activists went missing in Uganda, adding that he was not briefed that they were in police custody.

    Major General Felix Kulayigye, the director of Defence Public Information, said in a phone interview that the accuser, Bobi Wine, had not provided proof of the alleged abduction.

    He said he could not comment on allegations involving non-uniformed individuals without evidence and challenged Bobi Wine to present evidence, including the vehicle number plate.

    But Kyagulanyi insisted the two Kenyans were being targeted by the government for associating with him and expressing solidarity with their cause, demanding their unconditional release.

    There are conflicting accounts about the arrest location, with Bobi Wine posting on his social media platform that the duo was picked up from a petrol station in Kireka in Wakiso District on the outskirts of Kampala and driven off to an unknown destination.

    Videos circulating online show Njagi on stage beside the opposition leader at a campaign rally. The activists reportedly travelled to Uganda on Monday before linking up with Bobi Wine’s campaign.

    Security agents in plain clothes have often been accused of abducting, detaining, and torturing opposition politicians and supporters, with some victims resurfacing in court facing charges including treason.

    On Sunday, former Assistant Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Kampala, Dr Hannington Mutebi, condemned what he called the rampant abductions of opposition members by security forces.

    While officiating at the confirmation of 47 young faithful at St John’s Church, Makerere, he said the government should champion the rule of law rather than abduct and detain citizens and others with dissenting views in safe houses and prisons.

    Eight presidential candidates nominated last month are traversing the country to canvass votes in the January 2026 General Election, including Bobi Wine and incumbent President Yoweri Museveni.

    The incident has raised fresh concerns about cross-border repression in East Africa.

    In May 2025, Kenyan activist Boniface Mwangi and Ugandan journalist Agather Atuhaire were abducted in Tanzania while observing opposition activities, and in July 2025, Kenyan activist Mwabili Mwagodi was abducted in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and later dropped off in Kwale, Kenya .

    Earlier this year, Mwangi and Atuhaire were detained in Tanzania and held incommunicado for days before being abandoned at their respective national borders.

    They later recounted being brutally mistreated, including sexual torture at the hands of the Tanzanian authorities.

    Last year, Ugandan opposition figure Colonel (retired) Dr Kizza Besigye mysteriously disappeared in Nairobi only to surface four days later in a military court in Uganda, where he was charged.

    The cases have sparked widespread condemnation and concerns that East African governments could be collaborating to contain dissent.

  • Sudan Militia Leader Convicted of War Crimes During Darfur War

    Sudan Militia Leader Convicted of War Crimes During Darfur War

    A Sudanese militia leader has been found guilty of committing war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Darfur region more than 20 years ago.

    Ali Muhammad Ali Abd-Al-Rahman, also known as Ali Kushayb, was one of the leaders of the Janjaweed, a government-backed group that terrorised Darfur, killing hundreds of thousands of people.

    Kushayb is the first person to be tried by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for the atrocities in Darfur. He had argued it was a case of mistaken identity.

    The conflict lasted from 2003 to 2020 and was one of the world’s gravest humanitarian disasters, with allegations of ethnic cleansing and genocide against the region’s non-Arabic population.

    Five years after the end of that crisis, Darfur is a key battleground in another civil war, this time between Sudan’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), whose origins lie in the Janjaweed.

    During Kushayb’s trial, survivors described how their villages were burned down, men and boys slaughtered and women forced into sex slavery.

    Presiding judge Joanna Korner said: “He encouraged and gave instructions that resulted in the killings, the rapes and destruction committed by the Janjaweed.”

    She added that Kushayb had given orders to “wipe out and sweep away” non-Arab tribes and told soldiers “don’t leave anyone behind. Bring no one alive”.

    The militia leader was found guilty on 27 counts, centring on attacks committed between 2003 and 2004.

    Ahead of the verdict, a small group of Darfuris waited patiently to enter the court, in the Dutch city of The Hague.

    They were in no doubt about the pivotal role Kushayb played in their suffering, with one man saying: “He was the one who gave the orders. He was the one who got the weapons.

    “So if you ask me if he was important in Darfur, I will you tell you he was one of the most important ones.”

    The Darfur war began after the Arab-dominated government at the time armed the Janjaweed, in an attempt to suppress an uprising by rebels from black African ethnic groups.

    The Janjaweed systematically attacked non-Arab villagers accused of supporting the rebels, leading to accusations of genocide.

    That same systematic violence is still happening in Darfur as part of Sudan’s current civil war.

    Many of the Janjaweed fighters have morphed into the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the paramilitary group that is battling Sudan’s army.

    The UK, US and rights groups have accused the RSF of carrying out ethnic cleansing against non-Arab communities in Darfur since the conflict began in 2023.

    Throughout the two conflicts, there has been a “long hiring out of militias, suppressing of rebellion, and sexual violence used as a tool of war”, Dr Matthew Benson-Strohmayer, Sudan Research Director at the London School of Economics, told the BBC.

    Mr Benson-Strohmayer hopes the ICC verdict will impact the current conflict, but “sincerely” doubts it will.

    “I think the way that the war is being fought in Darfur in particular is really a war of terror,” he told the BBC.

    “It’s a very masculine war – sexual violence against women, or of starvation literally being used in order to barricade populations in and starve them to death.”

    Most victims of the first Darfur crisis remain displaced, and although the ICC has managed to prosecute Kushayb, there are still outstanding arrest warrants against Sudanese officials, including one accusing former President Omar al-Bashir of genocide, which he denies.

    Bashir is reportedly in military custody in north Sudan after he was ousted in a coup in 2019.

    Kushayb will be sentenced at a later date.

    (BBC)

  • Madagascar President Appoints Army General As PM to Defuse Protests

    Madagascar President Appoints Army General As PM to Defuse Protests

    Madagascar’s President Andry Rajoelina on Monday appointed an army general as prime minister, hoping to quell surging protests against his leadership that have plunged the country into crisis.

    In the latest in days of youth-led marches, security forces dispersed hundreds of demonstrators with tear gas in Madagascar’s capital Antananarivo, injuring at least one, AFP reporters saw.

    Sparked by anger against persistent water and power cuts in the impoverished Indian Ocean island, the demonstrations started on September 25 and have grown into an angry campaign for Rajoelina to resign.

    “With wisdom, I have decided to appoint Ruphin Fortunat Dimbisoa Zafisambo, divisional general, as prime minister of the government,” Rajoelina said late Monday in a declaration at the presidential palace.

    The new premier should “serve the people” and be “someone clean, with integrity, and who works quickly”, he said, promising he was “ready to save Madagascar”.

    The Gen Z movement that rallied the protests on social media responded by repeating calls for Rajoelina to resign.

    It said it was giving him a 48-hour “ultimatum” to “respond favourably” to their demands.

    “As long as Andry Rajoelina remains in power, we will continue to fight,” the group said on social media.

    Read moreHow the ‘One Piece’ manga has become a global symbol of Gen Z revolt

    Anger at power cuts

    Rajoelina’s move to sack his entire government last week failed to placate the demonstrators.

    University students and residents gathered near the University of Ankatso on the outskirts of the capital on Monday, the 12th day of the movement.

    They then marched towards the city centre, where they were stopped by a barricade put up by security forces.

    Clashes erupted throughout the afternoon, with at least one young man wounded and evacuated to the main hospital, AFP reporters saw.

    “There are about 120 hours of power cuts per week where I live,” said 21-year-old protester Tommy Fanomezantsoa.

    “We are protesting for everyone’s sake,” he told AFP. “The president is not listening to the anger of the people at the bottom. He always does what he wants.”

    Deadly clashes

    The Ankatso district was the birthplace of a 1972 revolt that led to the ousting of the first president of the poverty-stricken island, Philibert Tsiranana.

    “The future of this country depends on me, on you, on all of us,” one of the protest leaders told the crowd of several hundred people, urging them not to allow the movement to lose momentum.

    “We can clearly see that democracy in Madagascar is not respected at all,” said another protest leader.

    “They are even destroying it with brutality,” he said.

    He was referring to a United Nations statement last week that at least 22 people had been killed in the protests and more than 100 wounded, a figure rejected by the authorities.

    The UN also condemned what it called a heavy-handed response by security forces, including the use of live ammunition.

    AFP journalists witnessed a pregnant woman going into convulsions as crowds of people, including many children, fled from police in the hilly cobbled streets of the Amparibe neighbourhood.

    Local media also reported a protest in the southern city of Toliara, where demonstrators burned tyres.

    ‘Continue until results’

    Ahead of Zafisambo’s appointment, some were unimpressed by Rajoelina’s promise of a change of prime minister.

    “We don’t want him to listen to people in his office, we want him to get out on the ground,” said demonstrator Fanomezantsoa.

    He said he had been unemployed since the supermarket where he worked was looted on the first night of the protests.

    “We will continue until we get results,” he said.

    The Christian Council of Churches of Madagascar (FFKM) said it was prepared to mediate between the government and protesters.

    The Gen Z movement has taken inspiration from similar youth-led movements in Bangladesh, Nepal and Indonesia, waving a pirate flag from the Japanese manga comic One Piece.

    Despite its natural resources, Madagascar remains among the world’s poorest countries.

    Nearly three-quarters of its population of 32 million were living below the poverty line in 2022, according to the World Bank.

    (FRANCE 24 with AFP)