Foreign News
World’s Oldest President to Seek Eighth Term
Torough David
The world’s oldest head of state, Cameroon’s President Paul Biya, 92, has said he will run once more for re-election in October aiming to extend his 43 years in power.
“Rest assured that my determination to serve you matches the urgency of the challenges we face,” he said in a post on X.
He added that his decision to go for an eighth term came after “numerous and insistent” calls by people from all regions in Cameroon and the diaspora.
Biya’s administration has faced criticism over corruption, embezzlement, bad governance and failure to tackle security challenges.
There have also been concerns about his health and ability to govern.His absence from the public for more than six weeks last year led to speculation about his well-being and unfounded rumours that he had died.
His candidacy was expected but not formally confirmed until Sunday’s social media post.
Biya has never lost an election since taking power in 1982 and if he wins another seven-year term he could be president until he is nearly 100.
There have been growing calls from inside and outside Cameroon for him to step aside and give way for fresh leadership in the central African nation.
His candidacy follows a recent political divorce from key allies from the northern regions, who had been crucial in helping secure votes in previous elections from that part of the country.
Two of these men – prominent minister Issa Tchiroma Bakary and former Prime Minister Bello Bouba Maigari – recently quit the ruling coalition and separately announced plans to run in the election.
Last month, Tchiroma said the Biya administration he belonged to had “broken” public trust and he was switching to a rival party.
Multiple opposition figures, including 2018 runner-up Maurice Kamto, as well as Joshua Osih, Akere Muna, and Cabral Libii, have also announced their candidacies.
However, members of the governing Cameroon People’s Democratic Movement and other supporters have since last year publicly called for Biya to seek another term. He was already the de-facto candidate as the party leader.
Biya abolished term limits in 2008, enabling him to seek the presidency indefinitely.
He won the 2018 elections with more than 71% of the vote although opposition groups said there were widespread irregularities.
Reacting to Biya’s latest bid for the presidency, many people on the streets of the capital Yaoundé said they did not feel safe commenting openly on politics for fear of reprisals. Others withheld their names, ages or occupations out of caution.
“Never in the political history of nations have I seen or heard that a man of that age, is declaring his candidacy in a presidential election,” said one member of the public, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
“I really thought he would go and rest, and hand over to a new generation,” another local resident, Camille Esselem, said of Biya in surprise at the news.
However, some people welcomed another seven years under the veteran leader.
“The president still has much to offer the Cameroonian people,” said public sector worker Ngono Marius, adding, “if he is a candidate it means he’s capable to lead”.
Sylvia Tipa, a consultant in the city, told the BBC that although she believes in change and the democratic principle of “relaying” power to the next comer, maybe “there’s no-one better than [Biya]”.
“So far he has done a lot for the nation – we see his role played in conflict management and many other aspects,” she added, wondering if perhaps his long stay in power was God’s doing.
Foreign News
Ghana’s Parliament Passes Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill
The parliament in Ghana has approved a new bill criminalising homosexuality and the promotion of LGBTQ+ activities.
It proposes that identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or queer be punished by up to three years’ imprisonment.
The bill also introduces a “Duty to report” prohibited acts to police.Religious leaders have pressured President John Dramani Mahama, who still needs to ratify the legislation, to strengthen anti-gay laws since he came to power last year.
The ban has been sharply criticised by international organisations, including Human Rights Watch, which said it placed LGBTQ+ peoples’ lives at risk while also “encouraging citizens to surveil and denounce one another”.
Same-sex relationships have been banned in Ghana under laws dating from the British colonial era.
In an address to parliament, the bill’s sponsor Reverend John Ntim Fordjour said it would protect Ghanaian family and cultural values.
He said the new bans would make existing laws “more robust, more encompassing and more stringent in dealing with the practices of LGBTQI”.
Anyone who identifies as an “ally”, a general term for a supporter of LGBTQ+ people, could also face a prison sentence.
Exemptions were included for legal, media and healthcare professionals who report on LGBTQ+ issues or provide medical treatment or other services for gay people.
Human Rights Watch recommended the bill be abandoned in a formal submission to the constitutional and legal affairs committee scrutinising the legislation in the capital, Accra.
Ghana passed a similar bill in 2024 but it did not become law after former President Akufo-Addo failed to sign it amid legal challenges.
The current President Mahama has indicated he would support the bill’s passage, saying shortly after he took office that “I believe in the principles and values that only two genders exist – man and woman – and that marriage is between a man and a woman.”
Several African countries have cracked down on LGBTQ+ rights in recent years.
Senegal’s parliament approved similar legislation in March prescribing a maximum prison term of 10 years for sexual acts by same-sex couples and criminalising the ”promotion” of homosexuality.
Uganda introduced a death penalty for certain same-sex acts in 2023.
Foreign News
Unity Cup: Super Eagles Must Improve Despite Zimbabwe Victory — Chelle
Super Eagles head coach Éric Chelle has demanded more work from his players despite the impressive victory over Zimbabwe.
Nigeria defeated the Warriors 2-0 in the semi-final of the Unity Cup at the Valley on Tuesday night.
Femi Azeez emerged the hero for the Super Eagles, scoring twice to guide the three-time African champions into the final, where they will face either Jamaica or Iran.
The 24-year-old who plays for Millwall FC in the English Championship, swiftly put the Super Eagles in the lead after only five minutes, when he finished off a great team move with a left-footed rocket that Zimbabwe goalkeeper Future Sibanda could not stop.
Alhassan Yusuf, Tochukwu Nnadi and Philip Otele all came close to increasing Nigeria’s lead afterwards.
Azeez netted his and Nigeria’s second of the night in the 62nd minute after beating Sibanda in the box following another swift team move, with Otele finding Terem Moffi who then located the Millwall man in the vital area.
Moffi also set up Azeez for the opening goal.
Chelle is expecting a better performance from his players in the final.
“This is only a friendly game. This is not the World Cup qualifier. They need to work hard,” Chelle said at his post-match interview after the game at The Valley in London.
“They need to try to understand what I want, what the technical staff want and the high level is difficult.
“So you see, we made some mistakes with the ball. For sure, you see tomorrow we will work out during training,” he said.
In Saturday’s final at the Valley, the Super Eagles will take on the winner of Wednesday’s second semi-final between last year’s runners-up Jamaica and India.
Foreign News
Ghana Welcomes Pope’s Apology over Catholic Church’s Role in Slavery
Ghana has welcomed Pope Leo XIV’s apology for the Catholic Church’s historic role in slavery, describing it as an “act of moral courage” that was important in the global pursuit of “truth, human dignity and justice”.
The Pope issued the clearest apology yet for the Church’s involvement in legitimising slavery and its delay in condemning it for centuries.
The apology was published on Monday in the Pope’s first major teaching document of his papacy, which also focused on the dangers of artificial intelligence (AI).
Ghana was a major hub for the transatlantic slave trade when millions of people were captured and loaded on to ships, never to return home.
Between the 16th and 19th Centuries, 12-15 million Africans were shipped to the Caribbean, with about two million dying during the journey.
Ghana has long been a leading efforts for compensation and apologies from Western nations for the slave trade.
The West African nation’s government said the Pope’s recognition of the painful past was an important step towards healing, reconciliation and a just society.
”[The apology] reinforces the growing global understanding that confronting historical injustices demands truth-telling and moral responsibility as essential foundations for justice and reconciliation,” its statement, released late on Tuesday, said.
The Pope’s apology was delivered in what is known as an encyclical – technically a letter to Catholic bishops, but which over recent decades have been how a pontiff passes on messages to the world.
In the papal letter – titled “Magnifica Humanitas” (“Magnificent Humanity”) – Pope Leo sincerely asked for pardon in the name of the Church, adding that it was “impossible not to feel deep sorrow when contemplating the immense suffering and humiliation endured by so many”.
Leo said Church authorities had at times responded to requests of rulers by “regulating and legitimising forms of subjugation, including the enslavement of [non-Christians]”.
He also acknowledged that earlier in the Middle Ages, ecclesiastical institutions had their own slaves.
“This constitutes a wound in Christian memory,” he said of the Church’s record.
In April, Pope Leo completed a 11-day, four-nation of Africa – his first visit to the continent as pontiff – and where he made several forthright remarks including lashing out at foreigners who exploit Africa’s wealth for profit.
Ghana said the Pope’s acknowledgment of the “painful history” was significant, at a time the world was having a “deeper reflection” on the effects of slavery and colonialism.
The country successfully pushed for a UN resolution in March, which recognised the enslavement of Africans as the “gravest crime against humanity”.
Submitted by Ghana’s President John Mahama and backed by the African Union, it aims to provide a pathway to healing and the payment of reparations.
It also seeks to address the enduring consequences of slavery like inequality and racial discrimination.
Ghana, which still has some of the forts that were used for holding captives under inhuman conditions as they waited to be shipped to the Americas by European powers, is due to host a conference in June to discuss the next steps following the adoption of the UN resolution.
On Tuesday, Human Rights Watch said the Pope’s apology marked an important step, but stressed apologies alone were not enough and that real reparative justice needed to go further.
Religious institutions, along with states and corporations that benefited from slavery, should “reckon seriously” with their histories and take part in reparative efforts, the rights group added.


