15/07/2026

Stop atrocities in Sudan's El-Obeid

 



G7, EU urge halt to attacks in Sudan's El-Obeid, calls for wider arms embargo


G7 foreign ministers and the European Union's foreign policy chief on Wednesday urged Sudan's Rapid Support Forces and allied armed groups to stop all actions that could lead to further atrocities or endanger civilians in El-Obeid.



Displaced women in El Obeid (Reuters)


"We, the G7 Foreign Ministers of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America, and the High Representative of the European Union urge the Rapid Support Forces and allied armed groups to immediately cease any action likely to lead to further atrocities or endanger civilians in El-Obeid, including drone strikes and impediments to humanitarian access," the statement reads.

The ministers also called on all parties, including the Sudanese army, to cease hostilities, allow aid access and engage in good-faith talks.

"Following the atrocities committed during the Rapid Support Forces’ siege and attack on El Fasher, we remain gravely concerned about alleged severe violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law across Kordofan and Darfur regions, as well as Blue Nile in Sudan," the statement continues.

The countries urge the Rapid Support Forces, as well as the Sudanese Armed Forces and allied armed groups, "to abide by their obligations under the rules of international humanitarian law and international human rights law, as applicable," it adds, as "civilians must be protected."

The G7 therefore calls on parties to the conflict to guarantee safe voluntary passage, and to facilitate rapid and unimpeded humanitarian access into and around El-Obeid and throughout the country.

Ministers also backed United Nations' efforts to de-escalate the crisis, called on the UN Security Council to expand the Darfur arms embargo to all of Sudan, urged external actors to halt military and financial support to the warring sides, and vowed to promote accountability for violations while supporting Sudan's unity and democratic aspirations.

"We support the efforts of the United Nations Secretary-General’s Personal Envoy, Mr. Pekka Haavisto, to advance de-escalation in El-Obeid and support ongoing broader efforts by the Quad and the Quintet to achieve a humanitarian truce, followed by a permanent ceasefire and an independent, inclusive, transparent and civilian-led political dialogue," the statement reads.


Spiralling crisis

Sudan has been at war since April 2023, with serious reports of human rights violations and crimes against humanity.

This war between Sudan's army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, now in its fourth year, has displaced millions and devastated much of the country. Aid agencies have repeatedly warned of worsening food insecurity and limited humanitarian access.

The conflict has been described as the current worst humaniratian crisis in the world by the UN.

According to a senior World Food Programme (WFP) official, the country now risks sliding backwards into deeper hunger as conflict, aid funding cuts and rising agricultural costs driven by disruption linked to the Iran war threaten to reverse gains made after famine took hold in parts of the country, said on Tuesday.

Around 5 million people facing emergency or catastrophic levels of hunger, even after an intensive aid response helped reduce the number of people in famine-like conditions, Carl Skau, the WFP's acting executive director, told Reuters.

"It's a massive crisis, both in terms of numbers, but also the gravity," he said, adding that more than 100,000 people were still facing famine-like conditions, placing them in the highest level of the UN-backed IPC hunger classification.

"With these kinds of numbers in IPC (Phase) 5 starvation it is extremely, extremely serious," he said.

Across Sudan, nearly 19.5 million people face high levels of acute food insecurity, according to the IPC.


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On the evolution of the war, you can also listen to our recent podcast episode:

Sudan: Three years of war and new reports of meddling by Ethiopia



14/07/2026

Gorillaz

 

Gorillaz - 'Damascus' 

(ft. Omar Souleyman & Yasiin Bey) 

 Live Together For Palestine




03/07/2026

'Comfortably Numb Re-Imagined' for Palestine

 


29/06/2026

Uganda media shutdown - Update

 

28/06/2026

Media shutdown in Uganda

 

In Uganda, President Yoweri Museveni's son, Muhoozi Kainerugaba, is the head of the military, and this Sunday, he ordered the shutdown of newspapers, TV station and radio outlets, including NTV and the Monitor.  


Uganda's leading independent media group said it was under "military siege" on Sunday. This comes amid a widespread crackdown on free speech, accelerated by the army chief.


"NTV and Moniter (sic) are being shut down from today!" Kainerugaba wrote on social media platform X, referring to NTV Uganda and the Daily Monitor, both part of the Nation Media Group.


"In Uganda, I DO NOT believe in a free press! The press should be guided by cadres of the revolution," he added.


He also threatened to close more media outlets: "The closure of NTV and Monitor is just the beginning. We are going to arrest many more," he added on X.


Muhoozi Kainerugaba



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Ugandan journalists are appalled and afraid...


Other outlets, including Dembe FM, Spark TV, KFM, and The East African, are also affected.


One told me an hour ago: "It seems that he is the one running the show. He has over the past months, become very influential on almost every thing in the country. He makes orders on social media and orders arrests of people."


To him, it displays pure abuse of power.


"That man is just out of control. He has a cultic following that selfishly trying to make personal gains by boosting his ego."


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The Daily Monitor was launched in 1992 and became one of Uganda's most influential independent newspapers and has often been seen as an irritation by Museveni's government.


Kainerugaba confirmed on X that the orders had been approved by his father, Yoweri Museveni, who has ruled Uganda for 40 years.


Museveni, 81, won another term in January but many see his son as positioning himself to take over.


I was expecting to go, but I wasn't able to get the press accreditation, which is now over $1000, and most of my colleagues were expelled anyway after a couple of days.


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For more on the situation in Uganda since the general "elections" in January, my podcast episode from earlier this year: Lack of democracy and military grip...


https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/spotlight-on-africa/20260120-spotlight-on-africa-uganda-vote-and-somaliland-recognition-roil-east-africa







24/06/2026

newsletter - end of June 2026

 


Artist Grada Kilomba on her monument for lost Rwandan lives. And the fate of DRC's coltan...

In a podcast episode, I speak to the artist on how she chose to represent a genocide. I also interviewed Global Witness on their latest report on critical minerals from the DR Congo.



Artist Grada Kilomba on her monument for lost Rwandan lives. And the fate of DRC's coltan...

In a podcast episode, I speak to the artist on how she chose to represent a genocide. I also interviewed Global Witness on their latest report on critical minerals from the DR Congo.

On DRC's coltan and Paris' monument for Rwandans


New podcast episode:

 



This week, in RFI's Spotlight on Africa podcast, I look at the Great Lakes region. First, the NGO Global Witness shows us with a new report how coltan is being smuggled out of the DR Congo, amid the conflict in the east, to world companies, via Rwanda. And in the second part of this episode, we'll hear from the artist Grada Kilomba about her journey to create a unique monument for the city of Paris to commemorate the Rwandan genocide of 1994.

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This month of June, a new report from the NGO Global Witness has shown how coltan is being smuggled from the DR Congo, and sold to world companies via Rwanda, amid the devastating conflict in the eastern provinces of the DRC.

Coltan, short for columbite-tantalite, is a mineral from which the metals tantalum and niobium are extracted, both seen as critical raw materials by companies from the United States, the European Union, China and Japan.

The report shows that conflict minerals from the war-torn east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) are found in everyday tech products made by major world companies.

It also links the illegal trade to Rwandan companies clearly and to leading global brands including Amazon, Ericsson and Sony, sourcing minerals  from eastern DRC.

The traffic is linked to the M23 militia, accused of widespread sexual violence, summary executions and torture.

It took the British non-governmental organisation over a year of investigation through extensive documentary and field research to be able to prove the exploitation system.

Another Global Witness investigation from April 2025 had revealed that coltan linked to conflict in the eastern DRC likely entered the European Union market through international commodities trader Traxys. 

Previous reports also demonstrated the implication of companies such as Apple, from 2022.

The NGO pursued its investigation for months, then cross-referenced its findings with surveys conducted by the United Nations (UN) and other non-governmental organisations (NGOs). 

Alex Kopp, the author of the report and expert at Global Witness is our first guest.


>> Listen here: https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/spotlight-on-africa/20260623-blood-minerals-and-memory-the-great-lakes-in-focus


On commemoration





The artist Grada Kilomba was invited to create a unique monument for the city of Paris to commemorate the Rwandan genocide of 1994.

The monument consists of two black brass steles bearing an engraved tribute to the hundreds of thousands of men, women and children massacred between April and July 1994.

It was unveiled in the heart of Paris on 2 June 2026, in the presence of the two countries' Presidents Emmanuel Macron and Paul Kagame.

Kilomba is herself a Portuguese artist with African roots, from Sao Tomé and Angola.

She was raised in Portugal, and has worked in Germany, Brazil, England and beyond, mostly reflecting through performances and installations on the history of African and black people in general, across centuries and continents, including on the slave trade. 

She was chosen through a very selective process to design this monument, the first of its kind in France. And she decided to go to Rwanda to meet some survivors and start her own research to complete the project, titled ‘The Archive’.  

Her creative process led her to reflect on France and Europe's responsibility in the tragic events.

Grada Kilomba is the second guest of this episode.

 


>> Listen here: https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/spotlight-on-africa/20260623-blood-minerals-and-memory-the-great-lakes-in-focus