Saturday, February 28, 2026

South Sudan faces turmoil as former officials arrested in wave of detentions

JUBA, South Sudan 

A former South Sudan finance minister is the latest former government official arrested in a wave of detentions that analysts say shows cracks in the government of President Salva Kiir, who also faces an armed rebellion.

The latest arrest came Friday when Bak Barnaba Chol was taken into custody while attempting to cross the border into Uganda. His arrest followed that of another former minister of finance and planning, Marial Dongrin Ater, who was fired in August.

In the past week, a former central bank governor, a former undersecretary for the ministry of petroleum, and a general in the domestic intelligence agency previously posted to the same ministry have been detained.

The exact reasons for the arrests remain unclear.

Government spokesman Ateny Wek Ateny told local media outlet Eye Radio that the arrests were “not political” and were a “direct response to irregularities identified within the monetary system.” He said that a committee was investigating “financial malpractices.”

Edmund Yakani, a prominent civic leader, said Saturday that the mood in Juba was tense among politicians fearing detention. “So far, these arrests have mostly targeted financial institutions, but if the arrests carry into the security sectors it will be very dangerous,” he said.

Daniel Akech of the International Crisis Group said the arrests showed a narrowing of the president’s “big tent” coalition, which he has relied on for years to maintain control of a fractured political landscape.

The war in Sudan is hurting South Sudan’s economy, which is overwhelmingly dependent on oil exports. All of South Sudan’s oil flows through pipelines in Sudan.

Since the South Sudan war began in 2023, pipeline ruptures have at times put more than 60% of oil production offline. The World Bank estimates that South Sudan’s economy shrunk 24% in 2025.

In 2024, the International Crisis Group warned that the disruption of oil production could lead to much wider political violence as Kiir runs out of petrodollars “to keep South Sudan’s rivalrous generals and warlords on his side.”

The regime is already facing an armed rebellion. Opposition leader Riek Machar is under house arrest and on trial for alleged subversion, charges he denies. Many of his allies have since been arrested or purged from the government. Kiir suspended Machar as his deputy in September after Machar faced criminal charges.

Machar’s removal coincided with a sharp increase in violence. The U.N. estimates that thousands were killed in 2025 and 280,000 people have been displaced since December.

A U.N. inquiry has found that South Sudan’s leaders are “systematically dismantling” the 2018 peace agreement, signed to end a civil war and return Machar to a unity government with Kiir. Washington is urging peace talks again.

A dangerous moment, but US and Israel see opportunity not to be missed

By Jeremy Bowen

The decision by the United States and Israel to plunge into a new war with Iran creates a highly dangerous moment with unpredictable consequences. Israel used the word "pre-emptive" to justify its attack.

The evidence is that this is not a response to an imminent threat, which the word pre-emption implies. Instead, it is a war of choice.

Israel and the United States have calculated that the Islamic regime in Iran is vulnerable; dealing with a severe economic crisis, the fallout from the brutal crackdown on protesters at the start of the year and with defences still badly damaged by last summer's war. 

Their conclusion seems to have been that this was an opportunity that should not be squandered.

It is also another blow to the tottering system of international law.

In their statements, both President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Iran was a danger to their countries – Trump said it was a global danger. The Islamic regime is certainly their bitter enemy. But it is hard to see how the legal justification of self-defence applies given the huge disparity of power between the US and Israel on one side and Iran on the other.

War is a political act. Armed conflict is inherently hard to control once it starts. Leaders need clear objectives.

Benjamin Netanyahu has seen Iran as Israel's most dangerous enemy for decades. For him, this is a chance to do as much damage as possible to the regime in Tehran and to Iran's military capacity. Netanyahu also faces a general election later in the year. The evidence from the two years of war with Hamas is that he believes his political position strengthens when Israel is at war.

Donald Trump's objectives have veered and changed, characteristically. Back in January, he told protesters in Iran that help was on its way. Much of the US Navy was busy removing the leader of Venezuela at the time, so he lacked military options.

While the US was deploying two carrier strike groups to the region, as well as considerable land-based firepower, Trump talked a lot about the dangers of Iran's nuclear ambitions, even though after last summer's war, Trump declared that the Iranian nuclear programme had been "obliterated".

The Iranian regime has always denied that it wants a nuclear weapon, but it has enriched uranium to a level that has no civilian use in a nuclear power programme. At the very least, it seems to want the option of building a bomb. So far Israel and the US have published no evidence that it was about to happen.

In his video, Trump told Iranian people that "the hour of freedom" was at hand. Netanyahu had a similar message, that the war will present the people of Iran with the chance to overthrow the regime. That is not at all certain.

There is no precedent for regime change happening just because of air strikes. Saddam Hussein of Iraq was overthrown in 2003 by a huge US-led invasion force. Muammar Gaddafi of Libya was overthrown in 2011 by rebel forces that were provided with an air force by Nato and some Arab states. 

In both cases the result was the collapse of the state, civil war and thousands of killings. Libya is still a failed state. Iraq is still dealing with consequences of the invasion and the bloodletting that followed.

Even if this becomes the first case of air power alone collapsing a regime, the Islamic regime will not be replaced by a liberal democracy that upholds human rights. There is no credible alternative government in exile waiting in the wings.

Over almost half a century the Iranian regime has created a complex political system that is underpinned by a mix of ideology, corruption and when required, the ruthless use of force.

The Tehran regime demonstrated in January that it was prepared to kill protestors. It has security forces that obey orders to shoot and kill thousands of fellow citizens for challenging the system on the streets and demanding freedom.

Perhaps the US and Israel are trying to kill the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Israel believes in the power of assassination as a strategy. In the last two years it killed the leaders of Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon, and many of their lieutenants.

The Islamic regime in Iran is a different matter. It presides over a state, not an armed movement. It not a one-man show. 

If the supreme leader was killed, he would be replaced, most likely by another cleric supported by the Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), which exists alongside the conventional armed forces with the explicit task of defending the regime against threats at home and abroad.

Trump offered them immunity if they laid down their arms or certain death. The IRGC is unlikely to be tempted by his offer. Martyrdom is a constant motif in the ideology of the Islamic Republic and in Shia Islam.

Trump believes that the primary motivating force in politics and life is transactional – as his book puts it, the art of the deal. But dealing with Iran requires factoring in the power of ideology and belief. That is much harder to measure.

As this crisis has built since the turn of the year, and America assembled its armada, there have been increasing signs that the leadership in Tehran saw war as unavoidable. They engaged in talks, conscious that talks were going on last summer when Israel attacked and the US joined them.

They do not trust the US or the Israelis. In his first term Trump pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal, the JCPOA, which restricted the Iranian nuclear programme and was the marquee foreign policy achievement of the Obama administration.

There have been signs that Iran might have been prepared to accept a JCPOA mark two deal, at the very least to buy time. But the US appears to have also been demanding severe restrictions on its missile programme and its support for regional allies that oppose Israel and the US.

That was unacceptable to them, amounting to a capitulation. Giving up missiles and allies might even in the minds of the leadership make it much more vulnerable to regime change than the threat – and now reality – of attack.

Iran's leaders will now be calculating how to ride out the war, how to survive and how to manage its consequences. Their neighbours, led by Saudi Arabia, will be dismayed by the huge uncertainty and potential consequences of today's events.

Given the capacity of the Middle East to export trouble, the eruption of renewed and intensified war deepens the instability of region and wider world that is already turbulent, violent and dangerous.

Iran says it has hit US base in Bahrain, as it launches strikes across region

TEHRAN, Iran 

Iranian forces say they have struck a US naval base in Bahrain, as Iran launched strikes across the region in retaliation for a "massive" and ongoing attack against it by the US and Israel.

Huge plumes of black smoke were seen rising from an area near the headquarters of the US Navy's Fifth Fleet in Manama, Bahrain. The extent of any damage is unclear and the US has not commented.

Elsewhere across the region, the UAE, Qatar, Jordan and Kuwait - all home to US military bases - said they have intercepted missiles in their air space.

In Doha, Qatar's defence ministry said it had intercepted several missiles apparently targeting the al-Udeid air base, the largest US base in the region.

The US has about 13 military bases across the Middle East, with 30,000 to 40,000 troops normally deployed between them.

Authorities in Bahrain confirmed the attack on the US naval base, known officially as Naval Support Activity Bahrain. It is the home port for ships including anti-mine vessels and logistical support ships, though it is unclear if any were present.

Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said in a statement it was targeting US bases and assets as part of operation "Truthful Promise 4", in retaliation for the attack on Iran launched by the US and Israel on Saturday morning.

That attack - launched at approximately 09:30 Tehran time (06:00 GMT) - has so far targeted areas linked to the Iranian leadership, with US President Donald Trump encouraging the Iranian people to rise up against the regime.

In Israel, sirens have been activated across the country throughout Saturday - with its military saying numerous rounds of missiles had been launched at it by Iran, and that its air force is working to intercept them.

In neighbouring Jordan, the armed forces said they had shot down two ballistic missiles targeting its territory, with authorities saying there were no casualties.

The defence ministry of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) said in a statement that the country has been subjected to a "a blatant attack involving Iranian ballistic missiles".

"UAE air defence systems dealt with the missiles with high efficiency and successfully intercepted a number of missiles," it added.

It said debris fell on a residential area in Abu Dhabi, causing some material damage and killing a civilian.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi condemned the attack by the US and Israel as "wholly unprovoked, illegal, and illegitimate", and said Iran's armed forces "are prepared for this day and will teach the aggressors the lesson they deserve".

US and Israel launch attack on Iran as explosions are heard in Tehran

JERUSALEM, Israel 

Israel launched a daylight attack Saturday on Iran's capital, as witnesses reported smoke rising near the offices of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, 86, who hasn’t been seen publicly in days.

The U.S. has assembled a vast fleet of fighter jets and warships in the region to try to pressure Iran into a deal over its nuclear program.

Iran had hoped to avert a war, but maintains it has the right to enrich uranium and does not want to discuss other issues, like its long-range missile program or support for armed groups like Hamas and Hezbollah.

Despite claims that last year’s strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities destroyed the country’s nuclear program, Trump said that Iran “attempted to rebuild their nuclear program and to continue developing the long-range missiles that can now threaten our very good friends and allies in Europe, our troops stationed overseas, and could soon reach the American homeland.”

Trump said that Saturday’s strikes would be part of “a massive and ongoing operation” that will aim to “destroy their missiles and raze their missile industry to the ground” as well as “annihilate their navy,” and “ensure that the region’s terrorist proxies can no longer destabilize the region or the world and attack our forces.”

Friday, February 27, 2026

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 28/02/2026

 
















"Pakistan in 'open war' with Afghanistan" - Minister

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan

Pakistan's defence minister has said the country is in "open war" with Afghanistan, after Islamabad launched airstrikes on Kabul as part of a wave of attacks across the country.

"Our patience has now run out," said Khawaja Muhammad Asif following the attacks.

The strikes came after the Afghan Taliban announced a major offensive against Pakistani military posts near the border on Thursday night.

The latest attacks follow months of clashes between the two neighbouring nations, despite agreeing to a fragile ceasefire in October.

Last year's negotiations failed to reach a broader agreement for a complete end to hostilities, with both side blaming each other for not engaging seriously with talks.

The Taliban said a "retaliatory operation" had been launched at around 20:00 local time (15:30 GMT) on Thursday.

It said it had captured 19 Pakistani military posts and two bases, adding that 55 Pakistani soldiers had been killed. 

Pakistan quickly retaliated, saying the Taliban had "miscalculated and opened unprovoked fire on multiple locations" across the border in its north-western province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which had been met with an "immediate and effective response" by Islamabad's security forces.

It then launched a series of bombing raids on Afghanistan in the early hours of Friday morning, striking targets in Kabul, Kandahar and Paktika in response to what they called "unprovoked Afghan attacks".

All three cities are close to the shared Pakistani-Afghan mountainous border that spans 2,600 km (1,615 miles).

Pakistan's military spokesman Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry said it had hit 22 Afghan military targets and killed more that 200 Taliban fighters. At least 12 Pakistani soldiers had died, he added.

But the Taliban's spokesman Mujahid said just 13 Taliban fighters had been killed and 22 others injured, while 13 civilians had been injured and an indeterminate number killed.

During these hostilities, both sides have claimed to have inflicted heavy losses on the other while suffering little damage to their own.

In response to the strikes, Zabihullah Mujahid, the Afghan Taliban spokesman, published - then subsequently deleted - a post on X that the group had launched strikes early on Friday on Pakistani military positions in Kandahar and Helmand, two provinces in Afghanistan.

The Afghan Taliban has said it carried out air strikes on several targets within Pakistan, on Friday morning. 

Pakistan's Information Minister Atta Tarar said its military thwarted Afghan drones targeting Swabi, Nowshera and Abbottabad, which is a military garrison city housing the army's military academy.

Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said his country's forces had "the full capability to crush any aggressive ambitions", vowing that there would be "no compromise" in defending their "beloved homeland".

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Pope Leo XIV to make Apostolic Journeys to Africa, Spain and Monaco

VATICAN CITY, Italy 

Pope Leo XIV will make a ten-day Apostolic Journey to Africa and two others in Europe, the Holy See Press Office announced on Wednesday.

The first visit will be a day trip at the end of March to the Principality of Monaco, followed by the Africa Journey in April, and finally the six-day Journey to Spain and in the Spanish archipelago of the Canary Islands in June.

After the significant journey to Türkiye and Lebanon at the end of 2025 and after the announcement of the upcoming pastoral visits in Italy that will take him as far as Lampedusa, Pope Leo is resuming his pilgrimages throughout the world. 

The longest—from 13 to 23 April—will see him following in the footsteps of Saint Augustine in Algeria, where he will visit Algiers and Annaba; then visiting Cameroon in Central Africa, with stops in Yaoundé, Bamenda and Douala; Angola, where he will visit Luanda, Muxima and Saurimo; and finally, Equatorial Guinea, where he will visit Malabo, Mongomo and Bata.

This will be a complex trip, which is at the same time a journey in memory of the saint of Hippo, to whose figure the Successor of Peter is linked; and then touching two developing countries, with particular attention to the least, the poor and those who care for them.

Moreover, the Journey will be focused on peace.

Pope Leo will go to the Anglophone region in the north of Cameroon, where for ten years a civil war has been underway involving the regular armed forces and the separatists.

The final stage of this African Journey will be to Equatorial Guinea, the only Spanish-speaking African country.

The length of this Papal Visit approaches that of Pope Saint John Paul II in 1985, when he visited seven countries in 11 days.

Tanzania deregisters seized drug vessel operating in El Salvador

DAR-ES-SALAAM, Tanzania 

The Tanzanian government has swiftly deregistered the foreign-owned vessel FMS Eagle and fined its operators $20,000 after it was intercepted in El Salvador carrying 6.6 tons of narcotics.

Chief Government Spokesperson, Gerson Msigwa, confirmed the incident, clarifying that the ship, initially registered in Zanzibar, had no Tanzanian crew members on board. 

Speaking to press, Msigwa, said that the incident should not be used to tarnish the country as the ship was operating outside Tanzanian borders. 

He said the authorities acted immediately upon receiving reports of the monumental drug bust.

"We want to protect the country's honor and ensure that the Tanzanian flag is not used in circumstances that could affect our international image," he stressed.

This incident throws a harsh spotlight on the exploitation of "flags of convenience" by transnational criminal syndicates. 

For East African nations, maintaining the integrity of their maritime registries is crucial to avoiding international sanctions and securing vital shipping routes along the Indian Ocean.

The Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar took decisive action, revoking the FMS Eagle's registration a day after the seizure.

The incident underscores the complexities of global maritime law, where ships operate far from their flag states, complicating oversight and enforcement.

Tanzania has launched an intensive investigation to trace the vessel's true ownership. 

Diplomatic channels through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs have been activated to mitigate any diplomatic fallout and reassure the global community of East Africa's commitment to maritime security.

The seizure highlights ongoing vulnerabilities in regional regulatory frameworks.

At least nine killed in drone strike that killed M23 spokesperson in DR Congo

KIVU, DR Congo 

Sources have told various press agencies that the drone strike near the Rubaya mining site on 24 February that killed M23 military spokesperson Willy Ngoma also killed nine other people. It however missed the movement's military commander.

On 24 February, the Congolese armed forces conducted a drone strike on the strategic mining hub of Rubaya, in the country's east. The target: the M23/AFC rebel movement.

While the strike killed M23 military spokesperson Willy Ngoma, the movement's military commander escaped unharmed.

Sources have now revealed that at least nine other people however also perished in the attack.

According to information by the press agency Reuters, there could be seven more deaths associated with the strike, but no further bodies have so far been retrieved from the site.

The M23 has so far not commented on the attack.

The Rubaya mining site produces 15 to 30% of the world's supply of coltan, a key rare earth for computer technology and smartphones.

The M23 had been in control of the mining site since its rapid offensive against the Congolese armed forces last year, when it captured vast swathes of eastern DRC.

Nearly 8,000 migrants died or vanished on routes worldwide in 2025

GENEVA, Switzerland 

At least 7,667 people died or went missing on migration routes globally in 2025, the UN migration agency reported Thursday, warning the true toll is likely higher and calling the ongoing losses a "global failure."

The Mediterranean Sea crossing from Africa to Europe claimed at least 2,108 lives in 2025, while another 1,047 died or vanished attempting to reach Spain's Canary Islands, according to IOM data. 

The first two months of 2026 have already seen "an unprecedented number of migrant deaths" with 606 recorded dead on the Mediterranean crossing as of Tuesday.

Underreported Crisis IOM Director General Amy Pope said "these deaths are not inevitable," urging safer legal routes. 

Funding cuts to aid groups, crackdowns on humanitarian NGOs, and limited data access are hampering accurate tracking. 

The remains of 23 people washed up on southern Italian and Libyan coasts in the past two weeks alone, with "hundreds more missing at sea that cannot yet be verified."

Decline in Americas Crossings The global decrease from 2024's 9,200 deaths partly reflects fewer attempts on dangerous routes, particularly the US-Mexico border and Darien jungle, where IOM recorded the fewest deaths (409) since 2014.

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 27/02/2026