Foreign News
Japanese Prime Minister to Travel to U.S. for Talks with Biden
Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is set to depart for the United States (U.S.) on Thursday for talks with President Joe Biden amid the Coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) and tension with China.
Suga is scheduled to hold a summit meeting with Biden at the White House on Friday, becoming the first foreign leader to meet in person with the new U.
S. president, who was inaugurated in January.The two leaders want to show the strong ties of the Japan-U.S. alliance and their commitment to the Indo-Pacific region, Tokyo said.
Suga and Biden were expected to discuss climate change, the pandemic, issues related to China and North Korea, and cooperation over the Indo-Pacific region, the Japanese government said.
“Japan will strategically advance initiatives that protect the free and open Indo-Pacific through collaboration with like-minded countries.
“A strong Japan is a prerequisite for a well-functioning alliance with the U.S. and the foundation for Indo-Pacific peace and prosperity,’’ Suga said in an opinion article in the Wall Street Journal ahead of his departure.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin made their first overseas trip to Japan last month to hold talks with their Japanese counterparts Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi and Defence Minister Nobuo Kishi.
The four ministers reiterated their objections to China’s “unlawful maritime claims and activities’’ in the South China Sea and shared their concerns about the human rights situation in Hong Kong and China’s western region of Xinjiang, which is home to the Uighur ethnic minority.
Tokyo has expressed concerns about a new Chinese law that allows Beijing’s coastguard to use weapons on foreign ships.
Chinese coastguard vessels were spotted near a group of uninhabited islets in the East China Sea every day for the past two months.
The Japanese-administered Senkaku Islands were also claimed by China and Taiwan, where they are known as Diaoyu and Tiaoyutai, respectively. (dpa/NAN)
Foreign News
Cote D’ivoire Announces 25 Per Cent Reduction in Airport Charges on ECOWAS Flights
The Ivorian government announced a 25 per cent reduction in passenger and security charges for flights within the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).
Three decrees were adopted to reduce and standardise passenger, security and safety charges for domestic flights, flights within Africa and international flights outside Africa, a government statement said.
According to the statement, the measure is designed to reduce the high cost of air travel, which has often included taxes making up over 60 per cent of total ticket prices.
It also intended to align Cote d’Ivoire’s strategy to boost the competitiveness of national carrier Air Cote d’Ivoire and its public airports with the ECOWAS common aviation charges.
This initiative is an ECOWAS-wide directive aimed at fostering economic integration, trade, and tourism across West Africa, the statement said.
Foreign News
France Urges Citizens to Leave Mali after Rebel Attacks
France has urged its citizens to leave Mali “as soon as possible”, after a weekend of co-ordinated attacks by separatist fighters and Islamist militants.
In an update on Wednesday, the advice also warned French citizens not to travel to the West African nation, describing the situation as “extremely volatile”.
Explosions and sustained gunfire were reported across the country, including the capital, Bamako on Saturday.
In Kati, the defence leader Sadio Camara was killed in an apparent suicide bombing by militants, while in the north, separatist forces have taken control of the city of Kidal.Mali’s military leader Gen Assimi Goïta said the security situation in the country was under control.
Speaking in public for the first time on Tuesday evening, he said the army had dealt a “violent blow” to the attackers, and signalled operations were still ongoing.
The spokesperson for one of the rebel groups, the ethnic Tuareg separatist Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), on Wednesday vowed “the regime will fall, sooner or later”.
Speaking during a visit to Paris, Mohamed Elmaouloud Ramadane said the rebels intended to take control of several other northern towns – Gao, Timbuktu and Menaka – following their success in Kidal.
Foreign News
Ghana Military Convoy Attack Kills Three Civilians, Seven Assailants
For Somalia’s malnourished children, already suffering the twin catastrophes of looming famine and radical cuts in foreign aid, the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran means more than soaring petrol pump prices; it is a matter of life and death.
Shortages of lifesaving therapeutic foods exacerbated by shipping disruptions are forcing clinics to turn away severely malnourished children and ration supplies, Reuters reporting shows.
Almost half a million children under 5 suffer from “severe acute malnutrition” or “wasting”, the most life-threatening form of hunger, and the delays are worsening the effect of the aid reductions.
Health workers in Baidoa and Mogadishu say they have had to stretch out meagre stocks of specialised milk and nutrient-dense peanut-based paste vital to saving these children.
“Since the needs are large and we don’t have a lot of supplies, we have had to keep reducing the amount we give children,” Nurse Hassan Yahye Kheyre said.
The 225 cartons of peanut paste remaining at his clinic, which treats more than 1,200 children, will probably be exhausted within two weeks, according to the International Rescue Committee, which supplies the facility.
“If treatment is on-and-off, the children will become very weak, physically and mentally. And it may not be possible to reverse it,” Kheyre added.
The IRC is one of three aid groups that said transport delays and rising costs linked to the war in Iran were making an already complicated situation worse.
At the clinic in the southwestern city of Baidoa, run by IRC’s local partner READO, mother-of-nine Muumino Adan Aamin has been trying to get peanut paste for Ruweido, her 11-month-old daughter.
Ruweido is on a regimen of three sachets a day, but Aamin has been turned away twice because the clinic had run out each time.
Aamin nearly lost her daughter Anisa to hunger when a previous drought pushed Somalia to the brink of famine in 2017.
“Just bone and skin,” the toddler only survived because of peanut paste, Aamin said.
Nine years on, a new drought has pushed 6.5 million people, or one in three Somalis, into acute hunger, and aid groups are desperately trying to plug gaps.
An IRC order for peanut paste that would have fed over 1,000 children got stuck two months ago in the Indian port of Mundra, now congested with diverted cargoes unable to dock in the Gulf, said Shukri Abdulkadir, IRC’s Somalia coordinator.
After being told that the peanut paste, made in India, would take at least 30 more days to arrive, IRC cancelled the order.
It placed an emergency order for 400 cartons from Nairobi, and is moving supplies in Mogadishu to Baidoa while awaiting them.
But the increase in freight and manufacturing costs has pushed the price of a single carton to 200 dollars from 55 dollars, according to CARE International, whose latest order now buys enough for only 83 children rather than 300.
In 2024, deliveries of therapeutic milk and ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF) from Europe to Somalia typically took 30-35 days, increasing to 40-45 days in 2025 as vessels diverted around Africa owing to security threats in the Red Sea.
Since the United States and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28 and Iran closed the entrance to the Gulf, a lack of ships has pushed that out to 55-65 days, said Mohamed Omar, head of Health and Nutrition at Action Against Hunger (ACF) in Mogadishu.
Meanwhile, in Somalia, the IPC global hunger monitor says more than 2 million people are now in the “Emergency” phase, one level before famine.
Admissions of severely malnourished children in January-March to health centres supported by ACF were up 35 per cent from last year.
Staff at Daynile General Hospital, which is treating 360 children for wasting, said on April 20 that they barely had enough supplies for the week.
“Some children’s nutritional status has already worsened,” said health and nutrition supervisor Xafsa Ali Hassan.
Somalia was not among 17 impoverished nations singled out to receive a share of this year’s funds allocated to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) by the U.S., which has made the most drastic cuts among foreign aid donors.
OCHA says more than 200 health facilities have been closed and mobile teams disbanded.
It said in December that over 60,500 severely malnourished children had gone untreated as a result, and that the number could rise to 150,000 if funding gaps persisted.
Then, when the Iran war erupted, domestic fuel prices leapt 150 per cent.
“Somalia is really hard hit by the Iran war because people are still reeling from the impact of the previous drought,” said IRC’s Abdulkadir.
“It’s very difficult for people to absorb these shocks.”
OCHA has appealed for 852 million dollars from global donors to stave off a full-blown famine.
This is far below the 1.42 billion dollars it requested last year – yet it has still barely received 14 per cent of this amount.

