Sunday, May 10, 2026

"France 'never envisaged' sending warships into Strait of Hormuz" - Macron

NAIROBI, Kenya 

President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday said that France had "never envisaged" a naval deployment in the Strait of Hormuz but rather a security mission that would be "coordinated with Iran".

At a news conference in Nairobi, Macron said he was sticking to his position opposing a blockade from either side, and to "reject any toll" to ensure ships are able to pass through the strategic waterway.

Iran on Sunday warned of a "decisive and immediate response" to any French or British deployments in the strait, after both announced they would send military vessels to the region.

"There was never any question of a deployment but we are ready," said Macron.

"We have put together an ad hoc mission, co-led with the British, which has brought together 50 countries and international organisations to enable, in a coordinated way with Iran and by deconflicting the situation with all the countries of the region and the United States, the resumption of maritime traffic as soon as conditions allow," he added.

Macron, in Africa for a summit in Nairobi, said the whole continent was "victim of the blockade" of the strait, through which normally passes most of the oil exported from the Middle East.

France last week announced that its aircraft carrier, the Charles de Gaulle, had passed through the Suez Canal in preparation for such a mission.

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 11/5/2026

 


















French President seeks to cement Africa legacy with Kenya summit

By Our Correspondent, NAIROBI Kenya 

President Emmanuel Macron on Saturday embarks on a visit to Africa aimed at renewing France's engagement with the continent after years of strained ties with former French‑speaking colonies.

In English‑speaking Kenya, Macron will co‑host a summit on Monday and Tuesday bringing together African leaders and business executives, as he seeks to cement his legacy one year before the end of his term.

He will also travel to Egypt and Ethiopia as part of his Africa tour.

"The Africa Forward summit marks a major milestone in relations between France and the African continent," the Elysee Palace said.

The meeting will focus on economic development and cross‑border investment, among other themes, the French presidency said, stressing that it will be the first such forum held in an English‑speaking country.

Macron hopes to highlight France's renewed relationship with the continent as a "report card on his Africa policy", said one diplomat.

Anti‑French sentiment runs high in some former African colonies as the continent becomes a renewed diplomatic battleground, with Russian and Chinese influence growing.

Once master of vast expanses of northern, central and western Africa, France has played a crucial role in the continent's post‑colonial history, repeatedly intervening militarily since the early 1960s.

France has vowed to abandon the so‑called "Francafrique" strategy, under which Paris sought to keep francophone Africa under its thumb through political collusion, exclusive access for French businesses and oblique financial deals including graft.

Macron has gone further than his predecessors in admitting France's colonial-era abuses in countries including Rwanda, Cameroon and Senegal. But he has ruled out any official apology for torture and other abuses carried out by French troops in Algeria.

Ahead of his trip, French parliament definitively adopted legislation to simplify the return of artworks looted during the colonial era.

But under his watch, French forces deployed in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger withdrew following successive coups, as the juntas in those countries drew closer to Russia.

The unravelling of those ties came after Macron in 2020 summoned leaders of Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, Chad and Mauritania to the southwestern French town of Pau, threatening to pull out French troops.

The meeting was widely seen as a throwback to the colonial era and accelerated France's crisis in ties with the countries in the Sahel.

Amaka Anku, head of the Africa section at Eurasia Group, a risk analysis firm, said Macron should not be blamed for France's loss of influence in the Sahel.

"That was a long time coming, it's inherited," she told AFP.

"The best thing Macron did was to try to expand France's relations with anglophone Africa."

The military leaders of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger will not attend the summit.

Africa expert Niagale Bagayoko expressed scepticism about what Macron might be able to achieve.

"Nothing particularly new can happen in Franco‑African relations before the end of Emmanuel Macron's term," she said.

"There is too much baggage."

She said Macron was perceived by many in Africa as a leader who had "failed to grasp" the evolution of public opinion and was seen as "arrogant and paternalistic".

Some still remember how Macron in 2017 nearly sparked a diplomatic incident with Burkina Faso's then‑president Roch Marc Christian Kabore as he spoke to students in Ouagadougou.

Some complained of persistent electricity cuts, and when Kabore briefly left the room, Macron joked that he had gone to fix the air conditioning.

Critics also pointed out that the overhaul of the CFA franc, a France-backed currency used by some African countries and seen as a relic of the colonial past, did not amount to much.

Former French ambassador Nicolas Normand said the reform was "homeopathic", accusing Macron of failing to grasp the symbolic weight of a colonial‑era legacy.

Before travelling to Kenya, Macron will unveil the new campus of a university in Alexandria in northern Egypt alongside President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.

On Wednesday, the French president will travel to Addis Ababa where he will hold talks with Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, chairperson of the African Union Commission, and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres.

Africa’s richest man Dangote eyes Kenya for new refinery

ABUJA, Nigeria 

Aliko Dangote, Africa’s wealthiest industrialist, is eyeing Kenya as the site of a huge 650,000-barrel-a-day oil refinery he intends to build in east Africa, he told the FT, after questions over a previous push to build it in Tanzania. 

Tanzanian President Samia Hassan last week complained angrily to her Kenyan counterpart William Ruto that she had not been consulted over the earlier plan to build it on her country’s coastline, which was announced in her absence last month at an infrastructure summit. 

Dangote said in an interview: “I’m leaning more towards Mombasa because Mombasa has a much larger, deeper port.”

He compared Kenya’s port to Tanga, the proposed Tanzanian site for the refinery to process oil from Uganda and the open market. 

Dangote estimated it would cost $15bn-$17bn to build. 

“Kenyans consume more. It’s a bigger economy,” he said, adding that crude oil for the refinery could be transported by ship and need not be located near a pipeline that will carry oil nearly 1,500 kilometres from Ugandan oilfields to the Tanzanian coast at Tanga. 

“The ball is in the hands of President Ruto,” he said. “Whatever President Ruto says is what I’ll do.” He said. 

For the east African refinery to get off the ground, Dangote said, he would need Ruto to offer land, some east African finance and, most important, protection from what he called dumping of cheap fuel from the likes of Russia or India. 

“There is no refinery in the world that can survive without that protection,” he said. “If we have an agreement, we can start this year.” 

Tanzania’s president this month complained to her Kenyan counterpart after he and Dangote jointly announced the plan to build it in her country. 

“Why did you announce a refinery in Tanga, and I know nothing about it?” she said she had told Ruto in a private meeting. 

Industry analysts have speculated that Dangote might be trying to get a better deal by playing the east African neighbours off against each other. 

He told the FT he could still build the refinery in Tanzania “if they are able to sort themselves out”. 

Militia kill at least 69 in DR Congo

KIVU, DR Congo 

A militia attack killed at least 69 people in Ituri province in the conflict-torn northeast of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), local and security sources told our Correspondent Saturday.

For more than 30 years the mineral-rich eastern DRC has been a battleground between various armed groups, vying for control of its many mines.

Two ethnic groups -- the Hema and the Lendu -- have been locked in a long-running violent conflict in Ituri, a gold-rich province that borders Uganda and South Sudan.

Armed men affiliated with the Codeco militia (Cooperative for the Development of Congo), which claims to protect the Lendu, carried out attacks in several villages on April 28, local and security sources said, killing at least 69 people.

These attacks followed an earlier assault by another armed group, the Convention for the Popular Revolution (CRP) -- which says it fights for the Hema community -- on positions held by the Congolese army (FARDC) near the locality of Pimbo, they said.

More than 70 people were killed when Codeco fighters launched  the retaliatory attacks in late April, civil society leader Dieudonne Losa said.

On condition of anonymity, two other security sources confirmed the attacks, with one stating a death toll of at least 69, including 19 militia members and soldiers.

The presence of Codeco fighters delayed the recovery of the bodies for several days, they said.

"Only 25 bodies have been buried," Losa said Saturday, adding several sets of remains had yet to be recovered.

A humanitarian source described bodies "strewn on the ground" near the village of Bassa, one of the areas targeted.

The United Nations' mission in the DRC (MONUSCO) said on April 30 it had rescued "nearly 200 people caught under fire" from the CRP assault on the FARDC.

On Saturday it said it "strongly condemns the recent wave of deadly attacks targeting civilians" in the restive east.

The Ente association, a non-profit representing the Hema community, described the killings as a "massacre", urging its members to avoid retaliation.

Famous for its mineral wealth, ranging from cobalt and copper to uranium and diamonds, the former Belgian colony has long been beset by corruption and bloodshed.

Since early 2025, Ituri has seen a resurgence of the CRP, a group founded by convicted Congolese warlord Thomas Lubanga.

He was found guilty in 2012 by the International Criminal Court for recruiting children into his rebel army and released in 2020 on completion of his prison sentence.

Fighting between the CRP, the Congolese army, and the Codeco militia has been marked by widespread abuses and killings of civilians.

The region also faces ongoing attacks by the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), a group formed by former Ugandan rebels that has pledged allegiance to Islamic State.

The province has been plunged into a humanitarian crisis, with nearly one million internally displaced people, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

Saturday, May 9, 2026

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 10/5/2026

 










Iran accuses US of 'reckless military adventure'

TEHRAN Iran 

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has accused the US of opting for a "reckless military adventure" every time a "diplomatic solution is on the table".

Iranians would "never bow to pressure", Araghchi (above) said in a post on X, a day after each side accused the other of launching attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and as the US fired on more Iranian vessels.

Despite the clashes, Trump said the ceasefire was intact. It is meant to enable talks to end the war that the US and Israel launched in February.

Iran was expected to respond to US proposals on Friday, according to US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

"I hope it's a serious offer, I really do," Rubio said during a visit to Italy.

Iran has been controlling the Strait of Hormuz as well as attacking US allies in the Gulf in retaliation for the US and Israeli attacks. Some 20% of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas uses the crucial waterway whose blockage has sent prices soaring.

Early this week, Trump launched - and then paused - a US military operation to help free some 2,000 vessels which have been stranded in the area since February.

The US is also maintaining a naval blockade of Iranian ports in order to exert pressure on Tehran to agree to the US terms - a move that has angered Tehran.

On Friday, US Central Command (Centcom) said US forces had disabled two Iranian-flagged unladen oil tankers attempting to pull into an Iranian port on the Gulf of Oman "in violation of the ongoing US blockade".

US forces had fired "precision munitions into their smokestacks, preventing the non-compliant ships from entering Iran," the statement said.

Centcom said US forces were preventing more than 70 tankers from entering or leaving Iranian ports.

Later on Friday the US signalled its readiness to host a new round of Israel-Lebanon talks next week aimed at halting the clashes in Lebanon between Iranian-backed Hezbollah and Israeli forces.

A spokesperson for the US State Department said the "intensive" talks on 14 and 15 May would aim to deliver "lasting security for Israel, and sovereignty and reconstruction for Lebanon".

The US and Israel say any peace deal requires full disarmament of Hezbollah, but the Shia militant group rejects the talks, which began between the Israeli and Lebanese ambassadors in Washington last month. A fragile ceasefire was agreed, but has been repeatedly broken by Israel and Hezbollah.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

19 Kenyans killed fighting in Russia-Ukraine war, 32 missing

NAIROBI, Kenya 

Kenya's foreign minister said on Thursday 19 citizens had died fighting on the Ukrainian frontline and 32 others were missing, as criticism mounts over reports of the forced enlistment of Kenyans into the Russian army.

Speaking during a Senate committee session, Musalia Mudavadi said the number of Kenyans enlisted in the Russian army has risen to 291 from the previous figure of 250.

The east African country's intelligence services have put that figure much higher, estimating that more than 1,000 Kenyans have been recruited into the Russian military after being lured by recruiters with false promises of lucrative jobs.

"More details have come forward... (of those) enlisted in the Russian special forces," Mudavadi told the Senate, adding that 53 Kenyan recruits have so far been repatriated.

"We have 19 Kenyans who may have died in Russia. And we have now a figure of 32 missing in action," he said.

A foreign ministry spokesperson confirmed to our reporter the deaths had occurred on the front line.

Two Kenyans are being held as prisoners of war in Ukraine, according to Mudavadi.

The foreign minister visited Moscow in March, where he held talks with top diplomats in a bid to stop the forced conscription of Kenyans to fight in the Russia-Ukraine war.

Multiple investigations have exposed how Russia has enticed men from African countries with promises of lucrative jobs, only to force them into fighting on the Ukrainian front line.

These revelations have caused an uproar in Kenya.

Mudavadi's deputy, Abraham Korir Sing'Oei, denounced Russia's "unacceptable" use of Kenyans as "cannon fodder".

Last salute as South Sudan president fires army chief and finance minister

JUBA, South Sudan 

South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir has fired his finance minister and the chief of the defense forces, a decree said on Wednesday, in the latest in a series of government changes.

The South Sudan Broadcasting Corporation (SSBC) announced late on Wednesday that Kiir had relieved Salvatore Garang Mabior of his post as finance minister and dismissed General Paul Nang Majok as chief of defense forces.

No explanation was given for the firings.

Salvatore Garang Mabior was appointed finance minister in February 2026, while Gen. Paul Nang Majok was appointed in October 2025.

In another announcement, the president named Kuol Daniel Ayulo as minister of finance and planning.

Kuol had been serving as First Undersecretary of Finance and has held that position several times.

Kiir also reappointed Gen. Santino Deng Wol as chief of defense forces after being dismissed from his position as undersecretary for veteran affairs in the Ministry of Defense and Veteran Affairs.

He previously served as chief of defense forces from April 2021 to December 2024.

The president also reassigned Gen. Paul Nang Majok as undersecretary for veteran affairs in the defense ministry.

In other appointments, Kiir named Clement Juma as minister of agriculture and food security, a position that had been vacant since February this year, and appointed Mahjoub Biel Turuk, a former governor of Jonglei State, as deputy minister of public service, replacing Julius Tabuley.

South Sudan is governed under a 2018 peace agreement whose implementation has repeatedly been delayed. Under the deal, Kiir retains authority to appoint and dismiss senior officials at both national and state levels.

The changes come as the transitional government under Kiir moves to push ahead with amendments to the 2018 peace agreement aimed at paving the way for elections scheduled for December this year.

The proposed changes have been opposed by the Reconstituted Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (RJMEC), the peace monitoring body, and the SPLM-IO, the main opposition faction led by Riek Machar.

Machar, a key signatory to the 2018 deal, was detained in March 2025, later suspended as first vice president and is currently facing treason charges before a special court in Juba.

Several regional and international bodies have repeatedly called on Kiir to release him to restart an inclusive dialogue ahead of elections.

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 8/5/2026