Africa
MSF: Access to healthcare in Sudan ‘almost impossible’ as attacks on healthcare facilities increase

Humanitarian organisations are sounding the alarm over attacks on healthcare facilities in Sudan, warning that 70 percent of them are closed or barely operational.
In a new report entitled ’Besieged, Attacked, Starved,’ Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), or Doctors Without Borders, said that access to healthcare is nearly impossible due to systematic attacks, while the remaining operational facilities are under constant threat.
“We call to all warring parties to stop violence against the civilian health facilities and civilian infrastructure and to facilitate a large-scale humanitarian response,” said Michel-Olivier Lacharité, MSF head of emergency operations, on Thursday as the report was released.
Save the Children echoed those concerns, saying that attacks on hospitals tripled in the first half of this year, with more than 900 people killed while seeking healthcare or accompanying someone to hospital – 60 times the number of deaths compared to the same period last year.
Major hospitals, clinics, health facilities, ambulances, and medical convoys all saw fatal attacks in a country where half the population requires humanitarian assistance, according to Save the Children.
MSF particularly warned against violence in El Fasher city, the capital of North Darfur province, that made it near impossible for residents there and nearby displacement camps to access healthcare.
As of April, only one hospital with surgical capacity remained partially operational, serving an estimated population of over one million. Over the past year, many patients and their caretakers have been killed while inside an MSF-supported medical facility.
International response
Lacharité also urged the international community to take stronger action to address the crisis in Sudan:
“We ask to international actors, UN member states and bodies, the states with influence over the warrying parties, who provide them militarily, economic, or diplomatic support: they must use all the leverage to prevent further mass atrocities, they must place protection of civilians at the core of their engagement with the warring parties.”
Last month, Sudan’s military agreed to a proposal from the United Nations for a week-long ceasefire in El Fasher to allow aid delivery, but the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) didn’t state whether it agrees on the proposal and took part in renewed clashes with the army in the southern part of the city this week.
Sudan’s civil war has been raging since April 2023 after simmering tensions between the Sudanese army and its rival paramilitary escalated to fighting across the country. Some 40,000 people have been killed, according to UN agencies, and nearly 13 million people have been displaced, including to other countries. Those who remain face food insecurity and risk of famine and are exposed to diseases including cholera, which remains hard to contain due to the collapsed healthcare system.
Africa
30% on South African imports: Ramaphosa hits back at new Trump tariffs

A “unilateral imposition of a 30% trade tariff against South Africa.”
South African president Cyril Ramaphosa has pushed back against the latest wave of trade tariffs from the Trump administration – a wave that also targets Pretoria, the only sub-Saharan country on the list.
The move from the White House comes as the American government announced Monday that it would be delaying the start of some of its most aggressive import tariffs, which it imposed among others in April on nations around the world.
14 countries, among which Japan, South Korea and South Africa, however received letters on the same day detailing new, higher tariffs.
According to a statement published by the South African presidential office on Tuesday, “South Africa maintains that the 30% reciprocal tariff is not an accurate representation of available trade data. In our interpretation of the available trade data, the average tariff imported goods entering South Africa stands at 7.6%. Importantly, 56% of goods enter South Africa at 0% most favoured nation tariff, with 77% of US goods entering the South African market under the 0% duty.”
“South Africa will continue with its diplomatic efforts towards a more balanced and mutually beneficial trade relationship with the United States,” the statement from Pretoria furthermore noted.
At the same time, the presidential office urged South African companies “to accelerate their diversification efforts in order to promote better resilience in both global supply chains and the South African economy.”
Overall ties between Washington and Pretoria have experienced severe strains since Trump returned to office, with a meeting between Ramaphosa and his American counterpart in May doing little to improve the situation.
Africa
Broken windows and lootings: Nairobi businesses deal with protest aftermath

In the wake of countrywide protests which turned violent in Kenya on Monday, traders were counting their losses following extensive damage to their businesses and buildings.
Police in Kenya clashed with demonstrators Monday during the latest anti-government protests, killing 10 people, according to the state-funded human rights commission.
Authorities blocked major roads leading into the capital, Nairobi, and most businesses closed amid the strictest measures yet to contain the unrest. Kenyan youth and others for weeks have been protesting police brutality and poor governance while demanding President William Ruto’s resignation over alleged corruption and the high cost of living.
July 7, known as Saba Saba, is a significant date in Kenya’s history, marking the first major protests 35 years ago that called for a transition from a one-party state to a multiparty democracy, which was realized in the 1992 elections.
Saba Saba is Swahili for Seven Seven.
Kenya’s latest wave of violent demonstrations was sparked by calls for police accountability following the death of a blogger in police custody last month.
Africa
Amnesty International denounces lack of investigation into activists’ abduction

Nobody has heard of Oumar Sylla, known as Foniké Menguè, and Mamadou Billo Bah, for an entire year. Nobody knows their whereabouts.
The two Guinean activists, members of the now-dissolved National Front for the Defence of the Constitution (FNDC), were arrested on 9 July 2024 at the latter’s home in Conakry by armed men, before allegedly being taken by special forces to the Loos archipelago.
There, they have reportedly endured torture and interrogations.
Amnesty International has now called for “a prompt and transparent” investigation into the two activists’ disappearance.
The two activists’ fate is emblematic of the recent acceleration of forced disappearances and abductions, with Amnesty International denouncing a “climate of terror” by the junta in power in Guinea.
On 19 February 2025, the national coordinator of the Forum of Social Forces of Guinea (Forum des forces sociales de Guinée), Abdoul Sacko, was abducted and found the same day, according to his lawyers “in a critical state, tortured and abandoned by his abductors in the bush”.
Another case is lawyer Mohamed Traoré. The former President of the Guinean Bar Association has testified that he was “subjected to abuse” after being abducted from his home on the night of 20 to 21 June 2025 by armed men.
“It’s very, very difficult—very hard—for the families and loved ones of these individuals. We have had no communication from the Guinean state, let alone from the prosecutor who, during his only and single appearance, announced investigations into these disappearances. Since then, we’ve heard nothing,” said Souleymane Sow, director of the Guinean branch of Amnesty International.
But as the radio silence from the authorities continues, the hope of finding the whereabouts of the activists soon is shrinking.
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