« Dans l’est de la RDC, des millions de personnes sont au bord de la famine »

Aline Ouedraogo, de l’ONG CARE, rappelle que près de 20 millions d’habitants ont besoin d’une aide alimentaire d’urgence dans ce pays qui affronte la plus grande crise humanitaire au monde.

Depuis plus de vingt ans, la République démocratique du Congo (RDC) n’a pas quitté la liste des crises humanitaires pour lesquelles l’ONU tente chaque année de mobiliser la solidarité internationale. Occultée par l’émergence de nouveaux foyers de la faim au Sahel ou au Moyen-Orient, la dégradation de la situation – principalement dans l’est du pays du fait des violences – est passée sous les radars. En 2021, la RDC affronte pourtant la plus importante crise humanitaire au monde.

Mozambique : l’exode continue dans le nord où la sécurité demeure précaire

Des milliers de réfugiés épuisés continuent à fuir à pied ou en bateau la ville de Palma, victime d’une importante attaque djihadiste fin mars.

Six semaines après l’attaque de groupes armés djihadistes contre Palma, dans l’extrême nord du Mozambique, des milliers de réfugiés épuisés continuent à fuir à pied ou en bateau, alors que la situation sécuritaire reste fragile. Des incidents constants, ici et là, viennent perturber une paix incertaine, racontent témoins et ONG présentes dans la province pauvre du Cabo Delgado, frontalière de la Tanzanie.

Ouverture d’une enquête antiterroriste en France après la disparition du journaliste Olivier Dubois au Mali

Le Parquet national antiterroriste a ouvert une enquête préliminaire pour enlèvement en bande organisée et en relation avec une entreprise terroriste.

Il avait disparu depuis plusieurs semaines, au Mali. Le journaliste français indépendant Olivier Dubois, qui travaille habituellement pour Le Point Afrique et Libération, serait en vie mais désormais aux mains du Groupe de soutien à l’islam et aux musulmans (GSIM), branche locale d’Al-Qaida. C’est, en tout cas, ce qu’il affirme dans une vidéo diffusée sur les réseaux sociaux, dans la nuit du 4 au 5 mai, et dans laquelle il appelle à l’aide les autorités françaises.

Measuring Boko Haram’s Impact on State Security Services

The Nigerian state security apparatus has a long history of human rights violations. Most recently, the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), a notorious Nigerian police unit, made international headlines for its brutality and a wave of massive protests calling for its disbandment—which were then quashed by security services in a horrifying massacre of peaceful protestors. In many instances, the military’s response to Boko Haram has been similarly heavy-handed and indiscriminate. Abuses have been well-documented by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and even the State Department. A former colleague of mine gained access in 2017 to a prison holding suspected Boko Haram operatives, where he confirmed the abhorrent conditions and presence of significant numbers of women and children. Nevertheless, members of the military and police have also been victims of Boko Haram in their own right.

Turkey Seizes Alleged Top ISIS Man

Turkish authorities on Sunday said they had arrested a top ISIS commander and close aide of the terror group’s former leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in a military raid conducted last week in Istanbul.

Lethal Mediterranean Claims More Libyan Lives

At least 11 Libyans fleeing their homeland to Europe drowned on Sunday after their overcrowded boat capsized in the Mediterranean Sea, the United Nations’ International Organization for Migration reported.

US is whipping up fear of China because Washington simply cannot contemplate a world it does not dominate

According to research by Stop Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) Hate, there were nearly 3,800 anti-Asian racist incidents from March 19, 2020 to February 28, 2021, not including those that have occurred the most recently.

America’s annual threat assessment has highlighted the dangers posed by China. The manufactured hysteria about Beijing’s supposed intentions reveals a country unnerved at the prospect of losing its global preeminence.

On the Insidious Discourse of “Terrorism” in the US and How it Functions to Demonize Palestine Advocates and Muslims

Professor Heike Schotten — Still captured from We Will Not Be Silenced webinar at the University of Massachusetts Boston

After Heike Schotten, Associate Professor at the University of Massachusetts Boston (UMB), co-organized and moderated a webinar at the University of Massachusetts Boston entitled We Will not Be Silenced: The Repression of Academic Freedom and Resistance, from Leila Khaled to UMass Boston, UMB’s public records access office received a request from the Zionist Advocacy Center in New York “pursuant to the provisions of the Massachusetts Public Record Law” for emails from and to the webinar participants that use the terms “Israel,” “Palestine,” “Leila Khaled,” or “We Will Not Be Silenced” between June 1, 2020-October 25, 2020.

Reports from Afghanistan: General’s comment, blast, cost

U.S. general: Afghan forces could face ‘bad possible outcomes’

A May 2, 2021, Washington datelined AP report said:

Afghan government forces face an uncertain future and, in a worst-case scenario, some “bad possible outcomes” against Taliban insurgents as the withdrawal of American and coalition troops accelerates in the coming weeks, the top U.S. military officer said Sunday.