Sunday, February 15, 2026

China to scrap tariffs for most of Africa except Eswatini, says Xi Jinping

BEIJING, China 

It's another hurdle lowered for more Chinese-African trade: Beijing announced on Saturday that it would scrap tariffs for imports from 53 African countries. 

Eswatini is the only one not on the list as it maintains diplomatic relations with Taiwan, whose sovereignty China challenges.

From 1 May onwards, China will impose no tariffs on imports from 53 African countries.

This was announced by Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Saturday, according to reports from Chinese state media.

It's an important step to further increase trade between Beijing and the continent.

China-Africa trade reached $222 billion in early 2025 and could increase once the tariffs are scrapped. 

Beijing in fact already had a zero-tariff policy for 33 African countries, but now expands this previous policy to the entire continent with the exception of Eswatini.

This is because Eswatini maintains diplomatic relations with the island Taiwan, whose sovereignty China challenges and which it has threatened with the use of force.

The new trade policy also comes at a time when African countries are increasingly steering away from the US, which imposed steep tariffs on many of them.

CAF Champions League: Teams that have qualified for quarter-finals

CAIRO, Egypt 

Eight clubs have confirmed their places in the quarter-finals of the 2025–26 TotalEnergies CAF Champions League, following the conclusion of of the group-stage on Sunday.

With each group consisting of four teams playing six matches, the top two advance to the knockout stage.

As the group phase ended on Sunday night, several continental heavyweights secured their places in the last eight with Stade Malien making it to the knock stage for the first time in theire history.

Group A: Pyramids dominate, Berkane through

Defending champions Pyramids FC topped Group A in commanding fashion, finishing with 16 points from six matches after five wins and one draw. The Egyptian side scored 14 goals and conceded just twice, underlining their status as one of the tournament favourites.

Morocco’s Renaissance Berkane secured second place with 10 points, edging ahead of Zambia’s Power Dynamos. Rivers United of Nigeria finished bottom of the group with just one point.

Group B: Al Ahly lead as Royal Army and Young Africans wait

Egyptian giants Al Ahly lead Group B with ten points from six matches, remaining unbeaten with two wins and four draws. The Cairo club have once again shown resilience in tight contests, conceding just three goals so far.

Morocco’s FAR Rabat (Royal Army) sit second on nine points, narrowly ahead of Young Africans of Tanzania. 

Group C: Al Hilal and Sundowns advance

Sudan’s Al Hilal Omdurman confirmed top spot in Group C with 11 points after a crucial victory in their final match. The Sudanese giants have impressed with their organisation and efficiency, scoring nine goals and conceding seven.

South Africa’s Mamelodi Sundowns finished second with nine points, edging out MC Alger. Sundowns secured qualification after a decisive win in the final round, ensuring two Southern African representatives remain in contention.

Group D: Stade Malien surprise, Esperance secure passage

Mali’s Stade Malien emerged as group winners in Group D with 11 points, conceding just twice across six matches. Their disciplined defensive displays proved decisive in a tightly contested group.

Tunisia’s Esperance Sportive de Tunis claimed the second qualification slot with nine points, ahead of Petro Atlético of Angola and Simba of Tanzania.

With the groups concluded, all the eight teams to play in the last eight of Africa's flagship club competition.

The quarter-final draw will determine the knockout pairings as Africa’s elite clubs turn their focus to the decisive stages of the competition.

Qualified Teams (Confirmed)

  • Pyramids FC (Egypt) – Group A winners

  • Renaissance Berkane (Morocco) – Group A runners-up

  • Al Ahly (Egypt) – Group B winners

  • FAR Rabat (Morocco) – Group B runners-up
  • Al Hilal Omdurman (Sudan) – Group C winners

  • Mamelodi Sundowns (South Africa) – Group C runners-up

  • Stade Malien (Mali) – Group D winners

  • Esperance Sportive de Tunis (Tunisia) – Group D runners-up

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 16/02/2026

 


















CAF to conduct Quarter-final draws for TotalEnergies CAF Champions League and Confederation Cup in Cairo on Tuesday

CAIRO, Egypt 

The Confédération Africaine de Football (CAF) will conduct the Quarter-final Draws for the TotalEnergies CAF Champions League 2025/26 and the TotalEnergies CAF Confederation Cup 2025/26 at the Egyptian Football Association (EFA) on Tuesday, 17 February 2026, in Cairo.

The TotalEnergies CAF Confederation Cup Quarter-final Draw is scheduled for 13:00 Cairo time (11:00 GMT), followed by the TotalEnergies CAF Champions League Quarter-final Draw at 14:00 Cairo time (12:00 GMT).

The draw will also be live on CAF’s official YouTube Channel, CAF TV.

The draws will determine the quarter-final pairings and the route to the finals in both competitions, as Africa’s leading clubs move into the decisive knockout phase of the 2025/26 season.

Russia killed opposition leader Alexei Navalny using dart frog toxin, UK says

By Tom McArthur, LONDON  England 

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was killed using a poison developed from a dart frog toxin, the UK and European allies have said.

Two years on from the death of Navalny at a Siberian penal colony, Britain and its allies have blamed the Kremlin following analysis of material samples found on his body.

Speaking from the Munich Security Conference, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said "only the Russian government had the means, motive and opportunity" to use the poison while Navalny was imprisoned in Russia.

According to Tass news agency Moscow has dismissed the finding as "an information campaign", but Cooper said there is no explanation for the toxin, called epibatidine, being found.

While Cooper announced the findings, a joint statement was issued by the UK, Sweden, France, Germany and the Netherlands.

Cooper met with Navalny's widow Yulia Navalnaya at the conference this weekend.

"Russia saw Navalny as a threat," Cooper said at the event.

"By using this form of poison the Russian state demonstrated the despicable tools it has at its disposal and the overwhelming fear it has of political opposition," she added.

In the statement the allies said: "Only the Russian state had the means, motive and opportunity to deploy this lethal toxin to target Navalny during his imprisonment in a Russian penal colony in Siberia, and we hold it responsible for his death.

"Epibatidine can be found naturally in dart frogs in the wild in South America. Dart frogs in captivity do not produce this toxin and it is not found naturally in Russia.

"There is no innocent explanation for its presence in Navalny's body."

The Foreign Office said the UK has informed the Organisation on the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons of Russia's alleged breach of the Chemical Weapons Convention.

Praising Navalny's "huge courage", UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said "his determination to expose the truth has left an enduring legacy".

"I am doing whatever it takes to defend our people, our values and our way of life from the threat of Russia and Putin's murderous intent," he added.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot also said his country "pays tribute" to Navalny, who he suggested was "killed for his fight in favour of a free and democratic Russia".

Navalny – an anti-corruption campaigner and Russia's most vociferous opposition leader - died suddenly in jail on 16 February 2024 at the age of 47.

In 2020 he was poisoned with a Novichok nerve agent. He underwent treatment in Germany, and was arrested at the airport upon his return to Russia.

Epibatidine, the toxin the UK and its European allies have said was used to kill Alexei Navalny, was first derived from a group of poison dart frogs native to northern South America.

Though epibatidine has previously been investigated as a pain killer and for relief from painful inflammatory conditions of the lungs, it has been deemed too toxic to use clinically.

Russian toxicology expert Jill Johnson told our reporter it was "200 times more potent than morphine".

By acting on receptors in the central nervous system, it can cause "muscle twitching and paralysis, seizures, slow heart rate, respiratory failure and finally death," Johnson said.

The extremely rare neurotoxin is only found in one wild frog species in tiny quantities, and only when the frog eats a specific diet, she said.

Researchers believe the frogs acquire it through their diet because animals from different habitats have displayed different levels of the toxin, and those raised in captivity have none.

Johnson described it as an "incredibly rare way to poison a person".

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Ethiopia revokes accreditation of Reuters journalists

NAIROBI, Kenya 

The Ethiopian Media Authority (EMA) has declined to renew the accreditation for three Addis Ababa-based journalists from Reuters, the news agency said.

The EMA also revoked the news agency's accreditation to cover the 39th African Union summit, which was taking place in the Ethiopian capital on February 14-15.

The move comes days after the news agency published an investigative report that said Ethiopia was hosting a secret camp to train thousands of fighters for the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group in neighbouring Sudan. 

Ethiopia has not publicly commented on the story.

While the EMA has informally indicated that the February 10 Reuters story prompted its decision, it has not made an official statement.

"Reuters is reviewing the matter and will continue to cover Ethiopia in an independent, impartial and reliable way in keeping with the Thomson Reuters Trust Principles," Reuters said in a statement.

The EMA could not immediately be reached for comment.

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 14/02/2026

 













Relatives of Venezuela political prisoners begin hunger strike after 17 freed

CARACAS, Venezuela 

Relatives of political prisoners in Venezuela launched a hunger strike Saturday outside a prison in Caracas after 17 other detainees were freed, as talks drag on over the adoption of a promised amnesty law.

Wearing face masks, the group of about 10 women lay down in a line at the entrance to a national police facility known as Zone 7.

Many women were sleeping, with one telling AFP, on condition of anonymity: "Sleeping eases the hunger."

"The pressure has worked; we hope to stay here until everyone is released," Evelin Quiaro, 46, an immigration official and the mother of a political prisoner, told AFP.

Quiaro, whose son has been in detention since November on terror-related charges, said she had eaten her last meal at about 1:00 am.

In the early hours of the morning, National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez had announced the release of 17 prisoners in a post on social media, without naming them.

He called for Venezuelans to "continue this path of peace for the construction of democratic coexistence."

The historic amnesty is the centerpiece of the reforms undertaken by acting President Delcy Rodriguez since the capture by US special forces of the country's longtime leader Nicolas Maduro in a deadly January 3 raid on Caracas.

It aims to turn the page on nearly three decades of state repression, and is expected to cover all charges brought against dissidents who opposed the rule of Maduro and his predecessor Hugo Chavez over the past 27 years.

The amnesty legislation covers charges of "treason," "terrorism" and spreading "hate" that were used to lock up dissidents, according to the bill text.

But on Thursday, after backing the bill on a first reading, lawmakers postponed the adoption of the amnesty bill after failing to reach an agreement on how to apply it.

Pro-government and opposition lawmakers clashed over an article requiring would-be beneficiaries to appear in court to request amnesty.

They agreed to continue the debate on February 19.

Meloni pledges deeper ties, tackling migration at 2nd Africa- Italy summit

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia 

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni arrived in Addis Ababa on Friday for the second Italy-Africa Summit, the first held on African soil, reaffirming Rome's strategic pivot toward investment-led cooperation with the continent under its Mattei Plan.

Addressing dozens of African leaders, Meloni declared Italy has "no interest in exploiting migration to obtain cheap labour" for its production systems.

Instead, she committed to combating the factors forcing young Africans to leave their homelands, preventing them from contributing to their nations' development.

The summit reviews progress under Italy's Mattei Plan, launched in 2024 to shift from traditional aid to investment-led cooperation.

With nearly 100 projects across 14 African nations, the initiative targets critical sectors including energy, infrastructure, agriculture, and digital development—all aimed at creating economic opportunities to stem irregular migration.

Co-hosted alongside the African Union Summit, the forum underscores Addis Ababa's role as Africa's diplomatic capital.

Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed positioned his nation as a bridge for Africa-Europe collaboration, reinforcing bilateral ties through repeated high-level engagements with Meloni in recent months.

Guinea-Bissau opposition leader faces military court over coup plot allegations

BISSAU, Guinea-Bissau 

Guinea-Bissau's main opposition leader, Domingos Simões Pereira, appeared before a military court on Friday facing allegations of involvement in multiple coup attempts, accusations his entourage has vehemently denied as politically motivated.

Pereira, leader of the historic PAIGC party that led the nation to independence in 1974, was summoned for questioning over his alleged role in at least two coup plots—in late 2023 and October 2025.

A senior military officer cited "many suspicions" regarding his involvement in "subversive actions," though no formal charges have been detailed.

Pereira was initially arrested during the November 2025 military coup that overthrew President Umaro Sissoco Embaló.

Freed on January 31, he remains under house arrest, facing separate investigations into alleged financial crimes while being barred from public statements.

His lawyer denounced the proceedings as "provocative," insisting Pereira "has never been an advocate of coups."

The PAIGC's headquarters remains closed amid disputes over its flag, while critics note the irony of coup leaders investigating an opposition figure for coup plotting.