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  • Palestinian football chief denied entry to US in latest case of World Cup travel restrictions

    Palestinian football chief denied entry to US in latest case of World Cup travel restrictions

    The 2026 FIFA World Cup, co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico, opened on Thursday to widespread controversy, as sweeping visa denials, entry bans and controversial security measures imposed by U.S. authorities have barred dozens of accredited football delegates, sports officials, journalists and fans from accessing matches, drawing accusations of politically motivated discrimination against the global football community.

    The most high-profile case involves Jibril Rajoub, president of the Palestinian Football Association, who holds official FIFA accreditation to attend the tournament. Though the Palestinian men’s national team did not qualify for this year’s World Cup, Rajoub planned to join fellow global football governing body delegates to watch matches in the U.S. Instead, U.S. consular officials rejected his visa application, leaving him stuck in Mexico City, where he watched the tournament’s opening fixture between Mexico and South Africa earlier this week.

    Rajoub has framed the visa refusal as a politically motivated attack on the fundamental right of global football representatives to participate in the world’s biggest sporting event. He highlighted the stark double standard between this tournament and the 2018 World Cup in Russia, where he traveled and attended matches without any diplomatic barriers. “I don’t believe that it’s fair to use or to abuse and deny the right of all footballers all over the world to attend,” he said, adding the restriction is fundamentally unfair.

    The refusal comes just one month after Rajoub declined a public request from FIFA President Gianni Infantino to shake hands with the head of the Israeli Football Association. Rajoub explained at the time that such a symbolic gesture would merely serve to whitewash Israel’s widely condemned unlawful actions in Palestinian territories.

    Rajoub is far from the only accredited World Cup stakeholder blocked from entering the U.S. The visa issues have already touched nearly every corner of the global football community, from top referees to national team delegations, working journalists, and ordinary ticket-holding fans.

    In one recent high-profile incident, Omar Abdulkadir Artan, named 2025 African Referee of the Year, was denied entry to the U.S. even though he held a fully valid visa issued by the U.S. Department of State. Members of Iraq’s official national delegation, including star striker Aymen Hussein and the team’s official photographer, were held for seven hours of detention at Chicago O’Hare International Airport. While Hussein was ultimately granted entry after extended questioning, the photographer was turned away and deported.

    The International Sports Press Association has confirmed that dozens of journalists from African nations and Iran have also been blocked from obtaining the multi-entry visas required to travel between all three co-host nations to cover matches. Even fans with confirmed match tickets have not been spared: fans from Scotland and Morocco have seen their pre-approved travel authorizations revoked or their visa applications rejected at the last minute, just days before they were set to travel for the tournament. Iran’s government additionally confirmed that the 8 percent ticket allocation allocated to official Iranian fans was revoked just days before the tournament kicked off, leaving hundreds of Iranian supporters who had already booked flights and accommodation stranded with no way to attend.

    Compounding growing tensions over access to the tournament, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security recently confirmed that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) enforcement agents will be deployed inside World Cup stadiums hosted on U.S. soil as part of the tournament’s security plan. More than 120 U.S. and international civil rights organizations have condemned the decision, warning that the presence of uniformed immigration enforcement agents inside venues will undermine the personal safety of both international visitors and stadium staff, particularly for fans and workers from immigrant backgrounds.

    In response to widespread criticism of the visa restrictions and disruptions, FIFA issued a formal statement asserting that the governing body does not intervene in the domestic immigration and visa adjudication processes of the tournament’s host nations. This neutral stance has already drawn comparisons to FIFA’s 2023 decision to strip Indonesia of the right to host the Under-20 World Cup, after Indonesian local government officials objected to Israel’s participation in the tournament.

    This independent reporting was originally produced by Middle East Eye, a global outlet focused on in-depth coverage of the Middle East and North Africa region.

  • ‘I hope Rama resigns’: Why Albania’s Flamingo Revolution isn’t actually about flamingos

    ‘I hope Rama resigns’: Why Albania’s Flamingo Revolution isn’t actually about flamingos

    As the clock strikes 6 p.m. on a midweek Wednesday, several hundred Albanian demonstrators assemble along the perimeter of Tirana’s central Skanderbeg Square. A small group of speakers steps forward to address the crowd, while new arrivals stream in, carrying hand-painted posters and national flags. Roughly 30 minutes after the first gathering, the crowd begins a coordinated march toward the residential compound of Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, located in the capital’s core. Along the route, informal street vendors do brisk business selling Albanian national flags, branded scarves, whistles, and traditional white wool qeleshe hats, a symbol of national identity. By the time the crowd reaches the prime minister’s office, their numbers have swollen to thousands, stretching nearly a full kilometer along the city’s central boulevard. Chants ring out across the thoroughfare, mixed with the sound of drumming, whistles, and defiant singing. One slogan, scrawled on signs and shouted in unison, translates plainly: “Edi Rama ka mbaru” — Prime Minister Edi Rama’s time is up. By 9 p.m., the march has spread through central Tirana, gridlocking traffic for blocks. But most stranded drivers do not express frustration; instead, many wave Albanian flags, cheer on the marchers, or lean on their horns in solidarity, with some even climbing onto the roofs of their vehicles to display their support. What began as a localized environmental demonstration against a controversial luxury development has erupted into a sustained national uprising, entering its 13th consecutive day of action by the end of last week. The unrest first ignited on May 30, sparked by plans for high-end resorts on Sazan, Albania’s largest island, and within the protected Vjosa-Narta nature reserve — a unique ecosystem home to flamingos, sea turtles, more than 200 bird species, and over 70 plants and animals classified as endangered. The multi-billion-dollar development project is led by Affinity Partners, the private investment firm founded by Jared Kushner, son-in-law of former U.S. President Donald Trump. Public scrutiny of the project intensified after Ivanka Trump, Kushner’s wife, claimed she “discovered” Sazan during a private yacht trip, a comment that drew widespread anger among Albanians. In 2024, the Rama administration oversaw amendments to legislation governing protected natural areas, a change critics say deliberately opened formerly off-limits conservation zones to private tourism development. Construction work on the project kicked off in late May, and local residents immediately began staging small protests around the fenced construction site, which was guarded by private security contractors. Tensions boiled over after a video went viral showing security guards dragging a protester across the ground, an incident that galvanized public anger and drew thousands of new demonstrators to the movement. In the opening days of the protest, demonstrators centered their opposition on the threat to Vjosa-Narta’s fragile ecosystem, with viral photos of marchers holding signs featuring the reserve’s iconic pink flamingos spreading across social media. But in less than two weeks, the movement has undergone a profound transformation: what started as a single-issue environmental campaign has evolved into a broad-based anti-government uprising targeting Rama’s administration and the entire Albanian political establishment. Rama has repeatedly dismissed the protests, dismissing the movement as “engineered digital hysteria,” accusing international media of exaggerating the scope of public anger, and drawing a hard line on the development project. “There is no chance for this investment to stop as long as I am here,” the prime minister said. For demonstrators, however, anger extends far beyond the proposed resort. Many have grown deeply frustrated with years of unaddressed public grievances, entrenched corruption, and policy decisions they say prioritize the interests of wealthy foreign investors over the basic needs of ordinary Albanian citizens. Oljam Dervishi, founder and CEO of Albanian environmental NGO Resu, explained that the project sets a dangerous precedent for the future of the country’s protected natural spaces. “If the resort gets built, that will mean that everywhere where there are protected areas, they are not protected anymore,” Dervishi told Middle East Eye. “This project shouldn’t happen. If they want to develop, they should develop somewhere else.” Dervishi added that the movement’s priorities have already shifted far beyond environmental protection: “I don’t think this is a question of protected areas or the environment anymore. People feel like decisions are not taken for the people, but for investors. And that’s why they are furious.” Jonida, a computer programming student who has joined every day of the protests since they began, echoed that sentiment, noting that opposition to the project is not rooted in anti-American sentiment or opposition to the Trump family specifically. “Even if it was another billionaire, we would still be here,” she said. “Because the real problem is the principle of selling the country.” For Jonida, the Albanian government should be prioritizing far more urgent domestic issues: improving the country’s underfunded healthcare and public education systems, and lowering skyrocketing fuel prices. “This needs to be fixed first. You can think about tourism for elites after. But even then, it has to be outside of protective areas. You cannot change laws through corruption.” Like many demonstrators, Jonida’s ultimate demand goes far beyond canceling the resort: she is calling for Rama’s resignation, and says she does not support the country’s traditional political opposition either. Instead, she hopes the protests will pave the way for a new grassroots people’s party that will prioritize the needs of Albanian citizens. “I hope there will be a party that cares about Albanian citizens; that there will be people who are in it for the country and not for the money.” Rezarta, a 21-year-old architecture student and fellow protester, laughed off Ivanka Trump’s comment about “discovering” the island, noting “Ivanka the explorer says she found our island, but it was ours to begin with.” While Rama has promoted the resort as a major driver of economic growth for Albania, Rezarta says ordinary Albanians will see none of the benefits. “We Albanians get nothing. Only Ivanka, her friends, our prime minister and his friends can enjoy it.” For her, the protests are a reflection of widespread anger at a political system that prioritizes elite luxury tourism over the basic needs of the Albanian public. “The healthcare is horrible and living here is very expensive compared to the wages we get. We cannot take it anymore.” Rezarta also joined calls for the removal of the entire top political leadership, including both Rama and opposition leader Sali Berisha, echoing the popular protest slogan “Rama to prison; Berisha to prison.” The 81-year-old leader of the Democratic Party, who previously served as prime minister and president, is widely accused by demonstrators of colluding with Rama to protect elite interests. “We know that they are working together,” Rezarta said. “We want them gone from our politics. We want new people and new faces.” She added that the large presence of young people at the protests reflects a last stand for the future of the country: “Many of the people here are Gen Z and Millennials. You can feel that they’re here to fix everything – or else we’re all leaving Albania.” That fear of a mass exodus of young people is what drove Hortensa, a mother of two, to join the protests. Her motivation is simple: “I don’t want my kids to leave Albania.” Her anxiety is well founded: roughly 1.2 million Albanians — a third of the country’s total population — currently live abroad. “What don’t we have that Italy or Germany have?” she asked. “Our youth should remain in Albania.” Redes, a dentist who has watched dozens of his relatives and friends emigrate “because of this corrupted government,” shares that frustration. Even with a stable professional career, Redes says daily life in Albania remains a struggle. “The wages are bad. Everyone is fed up.” He is also calling for Rama’s resignation, arguing the resort project is designed to line the prime minister’s pockets and curry favor with the U.S. “But at what cost?” he asked. “None of the working-class people would be able to go to the resort. It’s for billionaires, not for us. Even though this is our land.” Ilir, a long-time anti-government activist who has been demonstrating against Albanian administrations for years, notes this movement is different from previous small-scale protests. “In the past, it was just a couple of hundred people. This time is different. Most people here want both the government and opposition leaders in prison. We consider them traitors,” he said. Ilir accuses the government of “selling and destroying the most beautiful parts of Albania,” adding that the protected natural areas were “sold to foreigners under the table.” While the protests have already shifted far from their original environmental roots, they have notched early partial wins. Albania’s top anti-corruption judicial body, SPAK, has launched a formal investigation into the project and frozen assets and bank accounts linked to the developing company. Separately, the European Commission has issued a formal warning that the project could create significant complications for Albania’s bid to join the European Union — a goal that public polling shows is supported by 91% of Albanians. Earlier this week, a European Commission spokesperson confirmed that after the body raised formal concerns, Albania’s environment minister committed to pausing construction and ordering a full independent environmental impact assessment of the project. As of Friday, when the protests entered their 13th consecutive day, there is no sign of the movement winding down. For Dervishi, even the act of sustained public protest is already a victory. “One of my goals is to end this state of being scared of speaking out,” he said. “That’s why this protest is so meaningful for me and for all the people here. And I’m very positive that the protests will have good outcomes that will serve the people of Albania.”

  • Israeli spyware firm targeted Whatsapp users despite US court order

    Israeli spyware firm targeted Whatsapp users despite US court order

    Facebook parent company Meta has uncovered new unlawful activity by the notorious NSO Group, claiming the Israeli-founded spyware developer has repeatedly violated a permanent US court injunction by targeting WhatsApp users across Jordan and Lebanon, the tech giant confirmed earlier this week.

    Meta’s security investigation found that NSO Group carried out coordinated spear-phishing operations against a small number of WhatsApp accounts in the two Middle Eastern nations. The firm also created unauthorized test accounts and discussion groups on the messaging platform, according to Meta’s findings.

    Following the discovery, WhatsApp published the three domain names NSO Group used to facilitate one-click device infections: ikhwancast, ghazacast and fr24cast. John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at University of Toronto’s cybersecurity watchdog Citizen Lab, has raised questions over whether the fr24cast domain was intentionally designed to impersonate respected international French news outlet France24, a common tactic in deceptive phishing attacks.

    A look at NSO Group’s history of controversial activity shows the firm is the creator of Pegasus, the world-famous (and widely condemned) spyware that can silently infiltrate WhatsApp accounts to extract sensitive personal data including private messages, photos, call logs and other user information. After years of legal and regulatory scrutiny, the company came under US ownership in 2024.

    The 2025 court battle between Meta and NSO Group resulted in a major ruling against the spyware firm. A US judge ordered NSO Group to pay Meta $167 million in damages, a figure that was later reduced to $4 million, but the most impactful outcome was a permanent nationwide ban that forbids NSO Group from accessing or targeting any WhatsApp services or its global user base.

    Meta says this newly uncovered campaign is clear proof NSO Group has blatantly violated that court order. The firm has a long-standing placement on a US Commerce Department blacklist that bars any American company from doing business with NSO Group, a designation the Biden administration implemented after determining the firm’s activities posed a threat to US national security and foreign policy interests.

    Recent industry reporting indicates NSO Group has been lobbying heavily to be removed from the US blacklist under the second Trump administration, a push that aligns with the firm’s 2024 appointment of David Friedman as executive chair. Friedman served as the US Ambassador to Israel throughout Trump’s first presidential term from 2017 to 2021, a high-profile pick widely interpreted as an effort to win favor with the current White House.

    This is not the first time NSO Group’s spyware has been linked to invasive surveillance of targets in the Middle East. A 2021 collaborative investigation coordinated by the journalism non-profit Forbidden Stories exposed how multiple Middle Eastern governments were using Pegasus to spy on journalists, human rights activists, and political opposition figures. Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates were among the nations named in the investigation as clients of NSO Group. One high-profile incident from 2022, documented by independent regional outlet Middle East Eye, captured the human cost of this surveillance: Finsbury Park Mosque chair Mohammed Kozbar was filmed explaining to his son that the family’s devices had been compromised by Pegasus, a moment observers described as a heartbreaking illustration of the harm invasive spyware inflicts on ordinary people.

    As of this week, NSO Group has not issued any public response to Meta’s allegations, after declining to comment on the claims when approached by The Guardian. Meta has not yet announced what legal action it may pursue in response to the reported court order violation.

  • UK imam’s house firebombed and suspicious device found at mosque in Bolton

    UK imam’s house firebombed and suspicious device found at mosque in Bolton

    In a sequence of shocking, suspected coordinated attacks targeting local Muslim community figures in Bolton, northern England, a suspicious device was discovered outside a local mosque, followed hours later by a firebomb arson attack on the home of a prominent local imam. The discovery of the suspicious package, which contained a battery pack, was made early Wednesday morning outside Zakariyya Jaam’e Masjid, local outlet Manchester Evening News first reported.

    By the end of the same day, the residential property of 42-year-old imam Hassan Patel, also located within Bolton, had been firebombed in a deliberate attack. Captured closed-circuit television footage documents a masked man, clad in a helmet and all-black clothing, approaching the driveway of Patel’s home. The footage shows the suspect lighting an accelerant-laden object, smashing a front window of the property and throwing the lit item inside.

    Patel resides in the home with his wife, four children, and nephew, bringing the total number of people in the property at the time of the attack to seven. Greater Manchester Police (GMP) confirmed that all seven residents managed to escape the attack without physical injury, and emergency services safely evacuated the entire family.

    In a statement following the attack, Patel expressed that his family has been left devastated by the brazen, cold-hearted act, which was carried out in broad daylight. He emphasized the attack was an intentional, dangerous act that deliberately put every member of his family at mortal risk. Patel, a long-time Bolton resident who has a track record of interfaith engagement with people across all religious and secular backgrounds, noted that law enforcement have so far not classified the incident as a hate crime. Even so, he argued that all potential motives must be examined thoroughly, with no lines of inquiry ruled out before investigations are complete.

    As of the latest update, GMP confirmed that a full criminal investigation is active and ongoing, and no arrests have yet been made. Detective Chief Inspector Mike Sharples of GMP released an official statement stressing that attacks of this nature have no place in the region, and no member of any local community should ever be made to feel unsafe, threatened or intimidated in their own home. Sharples acknowledged the understandable anxiety the incident has sparked across Bolton’s wider community, adding that officers are working at full speed to identify and prosecute the perpetrators. He confirmed that the attack is being treated as a deliberate, targeted act, and there is no ongoing threat to the general public. GMP has issued a public appeal for any members of the public with relevant footage or information about the attack to come forward to assist with the investigation.

    The dual incidents in Bolton have already sparked significant political fallout, with local leaders and party figures weighing in on the attack and the perceived lack of national response. Zack Polanski, leader of the Green Party, who was born in nearby Salford, publicly criticized Prime Minister Keir Starmer for failing to issue any public condemnation of the Bolton attacks. Writing on the social platform X, Polanski called the silence disgraceful, arguing that a troubling double standard has emerged: some attacks are met with widespread cross-party condemnation, blanket media coverage and urgent emergency response, while others are ignored entirely by senior national leaders.

    Local Labour MP for Bolton Yasmin Qureshi also spoke out, noting that the back-to-back targeting of a mosque and a local imam has left Muslim residents across the town feeling anxious about walking public streets and bringing their children to worship. Qureshi refused to downplay the nature of the attacks, stating that when a mosque and an imam’s home are targeted within hours of one another, the message to the local Muslim community is clear, and it is a message she recognizes too. “Islamophobia has no place in Bolton. None. Our Muslim community is part of the fabric of this town, and an attack on them is an attack on all of us,” Qureshi said.

    The Bolton incidents come one day after violent race riots broke out in Belfast, the capital of Northern Ireland, where hundreds of masked far-right rioters set fire to homes and vehicles owned primarily by ethnic minority residents. Rioters even set up informal checkpoints to stop and search vehicles for foreign nationals, following the arrest of a Sudanese asylum seeker charged with attempted murder earlier that same Tuesday. The suspect, Hadi Alodid, a 30-year-old who has been granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK, was filmed carrying out a knife attack on a man on a residential Belfast street, an act many political commentators have described as an attempted beheading.

    Following the Belfast attack, high-profile far-right activist Tommy Robinson (real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon) and X owner Elon Musk both publicly called for anti-migrant protests across the UK. Anti-migrant demonstrations were subsequently held in Belfast, Glasgow and Southampton this week, raising tensions around interfaith and immigrant community safety across the country.

  • Israel expels Palestinians from their homes to use them as military posts

    Israel expels Palestinians from their homes to use them as military posts

    For Mohammed Rahal, a Palestinian father who survived 18 months of displacement after Israeli forces drove him from his original home in Jenin Refugee Camp in the occupied West Bank, the dream of stability was short-lived. After pooling every resource he and his sons could gather to purchase a new home on the edge of the camp and working up to 20 hours a day for months to ready the space for his extended family, Israeli soldiers arrived at his door with a new order: evacuate the property immediately so it could be converted into an Israeli military outpost for a minimum of two months.

    Rahal’s story is far from an isolated case. The seizure of private Palestinian civilian homes for military use has become a rapidly growing practice across the occupied West Bank, a trend that has accelerated sharply since October 2023, amid a broad intensification of Israeli military crackdowns across the territory. When Israel launched a large-scale offensive across the northern West Bank districts of Jenin, Tulkarm and Tubas in early 2025, the operation left a trail of destruction across the region’s refugee camps: hundreds of structures were demolished, burned or seized by military forces, pushing nearly 40,000 Palestinians from their homes. The overwhelming majority of those displaced are residents of Jenin Refugee Camp.

    Human rights organizations and global policy experts have formally condemned the campaign, accusing Israel of committing war crimes, crimes against humanity, and ethnic cleansing in its West Bank offensive. Rahal was among the first to flee when the January 2025 offensive began; his original multi-family building, home to him, his five brothers and all their extended families, was partially destroyed in the operation. For 14 months, his entire clan crowded into overcrowded student housing at the Arab American University, a period he describes as marked by unrelenting hardship. Determined to rebuild a stable life, the family scraped together savings to buy their new property in Jabriyat, a hillside neighborhood overlooking Jenin Refugee Camp.

    The Rahal home sits on the edge of a seven-dunum plot of land that Israeli forces seized in May 2025, despite the area falling under Oslo Accords designation as Area A — territory formally administered by the Palestinian Authority. Just two months after the Rahal family moved in, Israeli soldiers arrived on a Tuesday and ordered them to evacuate within 10 minutes. After negotiations with the family, the deadline was extended to the following Thursday morning, giving Rahal just 48 hours to remove all the furniture and belongings he had spent weeks acquiring and arranging. Today, he waits for the evacuation order to expire on August 23, clinging to faint hope he will be allowed to return, but deeply skeptical of Israeli promises.

    “Even though the order is for two months, the occupation is unpredictable,” Rahal said. “They could extend the takeover for another period, and then another, until the house is seized permanently.”

    Down the street from Rahal, Fidaa Abu al-Haija received an identical evacuation order. Her home overlooks the newly seized land, a location that has fueled widespread local fears that the military takeover is intended to be permanent, with Israeli forces planning to build a full military camp across the confiscated plot, expanding seizures to encompass the entire neighborhood over time. Abu al-Haija lives in the home with her three children; her husband has been held in an Israeli prison for nearly four years. Her brother-in-law, also imprisoned by Israel for more than four years, received an evacuation order for his nearby home as well, forcing his family of four to leave their property too.

    Long before the formal evacuation order, Abu al-Haija said, Israeli forces carried out repeated raids on her home during the Jenin offensive, traumatizing her young children and damaging rooms so badly that much of her furniture is already unusable. She often was forced to abandon trips home from work mid-journey, when military checkpoints and deployments blocked access to the neighborhood. “I knew they wouldn’t leave me alone,” she said. The formal eviction order marks a dangerous new escalation, she added, and with her husband’s original family home inside Jenin Refugee Camp already destroyed, she has no safety net. As workers carried her belongings out of her home, she told reporters she was scrambling to find an affordable rental while trying to salvage what little remains of her family’s life.

    “The furniture is piled up outside because I want to save it before it’s destroyed,” she said. “We’ve been living through this tragic situation for more than a year.”

    Jabriyat’s vantage point overlooking Jenin Refugee Camp makes it strategically valuable to Israeli forces, and increasingly dangerous for the Palestinian residents who call it home. Mu’tasim Istaiti, a neighbor who already survived more than a year of displacement when soldiers seized his home during the initial offensive, returned to the neighborhood to protect his property only to find the area transformed. “Since we came back, it feels like we’re living in a ghost town,” he said. “All we hear are military vehicles. This used to be a vibrant neighborhood. Now it’s almost deserted.” Over safety fears, he rarely allows his children to leave the home unaccompanied, and Israeli forces have blocked the neighborhood’s main access road with barbed wire, forcing residents to take a dangerous, unpaved alternative route. “We know staying here is dangerous, but we want to protect our homes until the very last moment,” he said. “We don’t know what the future holds for our children and us after the decision to confiscate the land near us.”

    Mohammad Jarrar, mayor of Jenin, told Middle East Eye that Jabriyat is one of the city’s largest residential neighborhoods, home to roughly 10,000 Palestinian residents. At least 15 families have already been forced from their homes in the neighborhood since the early 2025 offensive began, and Israeli restrictions have blocked Jenin municipal crews from accessing areas near the camp to deliver basic services to residents who remain. In one case, a broken sewage pipe has flooded local streets, creating a severe public health hazard, but workers have not been permitted to reach the site to make repairs.

    “We fear the displacement of these families will become permanent,” Jarrar said. “The occupation appears intent on displacing as many residents as possible out of the neighborhoods surrounding the camp.” According to Jenin municipal data, approximately 800 families have already been displaced from neighborhoods across Jenin city, not counting the thousands more displaced from the Jenin Refugee Camp itself. “Even those who remain are being pressured through the withholding of services,” Jarrar added. “The aim is to make life so difficult that people leave on their own.”

    Global human rights advocates warn that the accelerating pattern of home seizures and forced displacement in northern West Bank marks a dangerous escalation of Israel’s decades-long occupation, with long-term consequences for the territorial and humanitarian status of the region.

  • Sadiq Khan says he told Met Police to investigate Great Israeli Real Estate event

    Sadiq Khan says he told Met Police to investigate Great Israeli Real Estate event

    A brewing controversy over an upcoming real estate event in London that promotes properties linked to illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank has drawn public opposition from London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who has confirmed he has raised concerns about the gathering with UK law enforcement and senior government departments.

    Khan made his opposition official during Friday’s Mayor’s Question Time session at the London Assembly, responding to a question tabled by Zack Polanski, assembly member and leader of the Green Party of England and Wales. The gathering, branded the Great Israeli Real Estate Event, is scheduled to open this Sunday, though organizers have refused to publicly disclose its exact location.

    In his address to the assembly, Khan made clear his position on the issue: “Israeli settlements in the West Bank are unjustifiable and illegal under international law. They are deeply tied to the ongoing displacement of Palestinians. I condemn any attempt to sell property in the settlements in the West Bank, be that in London or anywhere else in the world.”

    The mayor added that his shared concerns over the event’s planned presence in London had prompted direct outreach to the Metropolitan Police (Met), the UK’s capital police force. “I’m informed that any allegations of criminality relating to the potentially unlawful sale of property at the event would be assessed by the Met with a view to investigation,” Khan said. When pressed by Polanski on whether he had contacted the UK foreign secretary, Khan confirmed his office had already established communications with both the Foreign Office and Home Office, declining to share further details on the discussions for operational reasons.

    Following the question time session, Polanski told Middle East Eye (MEE) he welcomed Khan’s strong rebuke of the event and its ties to activity that violates international law, but stressed that concrete action is now needed. “In practical terms, the Met Police should shut down the event on the grounds that it is unlawful. London risks becoming complicit in settlement expansion if people in our capital are profiting from the theft of Palestinian land,” Polanski said.

    Legal advocacy groups have already formally requested a police investigation into whether the event should be blocked under a UK Serious Crime Prevention Order (SCPO), a civil court order designed to restrict involvement in serious criminal activity. In a letter sent to the Met on Friday, the International Centre of Justice for Palestinians (ICJP), the European Legal Support Center and the Public Interest Law Centre called on officers to assess whether reasonable grounds exist to investigate potential offenses stemming from the event’s organization, promotion and facilitation.

    The letter specifically asks the Met to examine whether any financial flows tied to the event qualify as criminal property, and to consider applying for a SCPO if evidence confirms serious criminal conduct. “Palestinian land is not for sale, and occupation is not a real estate opportunity,” said Órlaith Roe, ICJP’s public affairs and communications officer. “This order sets out further evidence of the serious concerns surrounding the illegality of this event, concerns we have already raised with the Metropolitan Police.”

    MEE’s prior reporting has confirmed direct links between the event’s participating companies and illegal settlement activity. Multiple participating firms openly advertise or have built projects in illegal Israeli settlements across the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem: Harey Zahav advertises properties in Negohot, a settlement in the southern Hebron Hills; the Meshulam Levinstein Group has constructed residential and commercial projects in illegal settlements including East Jerusalem’s Homat Shmuel neighborhood; Tivuch Shelly real estate agency lists properties in the Ma’ale Adunim settlement; and Africa Israel Residences, part of the Africa Israel Group, has been involved in multiple settlement projects across the West Bank and East Jerusalem. At the time of writing, the event’s website displays a map of Israel that incorporates all occupied Palestinian territories, though a reference to the Gush Etzion settlement cluster was removed from the site earlier this week.

    The UK Foreign Office has already confirmed that Israeli settlements violate international law and pose a major barrier to lasting regional peace. Just days before the event, the UK government updated its official Business Risk Guidance to explicitly warn British citizens and businesses against engaging in any economic or financial activity tied to illegal Israeli settlements. When MEE requested comment from the Foreign Office earlier this week, a spokesperson said the government would continue coordinating policy with international allies and pursue concrete action to counter settlement expansion.

    Event organizers have pushed back against the allegations in comments to Jewish News, denying any plans to feature properties from the occupied West Bank. They claimed “all exhibitors, without exception, will provide information about properties and projects within the Green Line” and dismissed criticism as “ridiculous allegations” motivated by anti-Israeli sentiment.

    This is not the first time the Great Israeli Real Estate Event has sparked controversy: the gathering was held in New York City last month, where reporting from The Intercept confirmed at least one exhibitor advertised land sales in illegal occupied settlements. New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani also publicly opposed the event, and Amnesty International UK has this week called on the UK government to take immediate action to block the London gathering from going forward.

  • ‘We knew it was coming’: Belfast violence leaves Syrian supermarket in ruins

    ‘We knew it was coming’: Belfast violence leaves Syrian supermarket in ruins

    In a strongly loyalist Protestant neighborhood of south Belfast, two Syrian migrants who spent years building a small community business now face the aftermath of destruction for the second time in two years. For managers Mohammed and Sultan, the charred remains of their Sham supermarket on Donegall Road have left them with little choice but to flee the area they have called home for over a decade.

    Mohammed, who fled Syria’s conflict in 2014 with a permanent shrapnel wound to his leg and gained British citizenship a year later, says the violence is inevitable. “It’s about to kick off,” he warned before the attack. His younger business partner Sultan, who was just 10 years old when his family escaped war-torn Aleppo to rebuild their lives in Northern Ireland’s capital, echoes the grim realization: “We’ve got to go.”

    The pair pack into Mohammed’s car, its interior cluttered with the messy, familiar chaos of a life with six children – half-eaten croissants tucked under seats, discarded clothing piled against the baby seat, one window stuck permanently open. Minutes later, they sit down at a nearby Lebanese cafe to reflect on the total loss of all their hard-won progress.

    Mohammed has managed the neighborhood supermarket since 2021, and this latest arson marks the second time masked gangs targeting ethnic minority-owned businesses have destroyed the property. Just three days before the attack, the store stood fully stocked: produce lined the front display, aisles were clean and welcoming, and new refrigeration units – installed to replace equipment destroyed in the 2024 attack – were fully operational. Today, the entire building is gutted by fire, its facade and sections of the residential flats above blackened by soot. The heavy protective security shutters are split clean in two, a discarded wheelie bin sits abandoned outside, and pigeons pick through the charred rubble for scraps of food. “They burned it all,” Mohammed confirms plainly.

    The attack came in the wake of a fatal stabbing carried out by a Sudanese man on local resident Stephen Ogilvie, an event the two business owners knew would act as a tinderbox for sectarian and anti-immigrant violence. It would mark the third consecutive summer of racist unrest in Belfast. “We saw some things on Facebook, so we knew it was going to happen,” Mohammed explained. Out of respect for Ogilvie, he voluntarily closed the store on Tuesday, but the gesture did nothing to stop the approaching violence. By 7 p.m., as gangs rampaged through loyalist areas of the city, firebombing homes they identified as belonging to ethnic minority families and setting vehicles alight, Mohammed’s phone flooded with urgent messages alerting him that his shop was ablaze. There was nothing he could do to stop it.

    When the pair arrived at dawn the next morning to assess the damage, they found nothing salvageable. Even the new fridges and freezers – replaced after the first attack in August 2024, which followed a wave of anti-immigrant riots that spread across the UK from the English town of Southport – were completely destroyed. The entire stock of produce was lost to the flames.

    The Sham supermarket sits directly across from Sandy Row Rangers Supporters Club, a local institution rooted in the area’s staunch loyalist identity, which supports Northern Ireland remaining part of the United Kingdom. The neighborhood is dotted with iconic markers of that identity: a wall mural marking Queen Elizabeth II’s 2012 Diamond Jubilee inscribed “From Sandy Row to the House of Windsor”, a tribute to the Northern Irish national football team labeled “Our wee country”, and murals honoring loyalist paramilitary fighters killed during the Troubles, emblazoned with the crests of the Ulster Defence Association and Ulster Freedom Fighters. Flags fly from every building: the Union Jack, Saint George’s Cross, and the Israeli flag, raised in counterpoint to the Palestinian and occasional Hezbollah flags common in Catholic west Belfast.

    Outside the supporters club, local opinion splits on the violence. While many long-term residents reject attempts to paint the entire loyalist community as racist, hostility toward the Syrian-owned supermarket persists, repeating unsubstantiated talking points spread by far-right figures including Elon Musk and Tommy Robinson. One local man in his 60s repeated false claims that the shop’s owners are drug dealers, alleging repeated tax raids on the property. Sultan dismisses these allegations as baseless excuses to justify years of harassment and ultimately the destruction of the business. Graffiti scrawled on a nearby apartment building across the street labels the property “Drug dealer flat”, echoing the smears.

    Other local residents openly condemn the rioting. Jackie, 69, and John, a former British soldier who settled in Belfast 50 years ago, both describe the attackers as thugs. “These people are thugs,” Jackie says, while John adds “Personally, I think they’re doing the wrong thing.” Even so, both parrot anti-migrant rhetoric common in far-right circles, claiming migrants housed in local hotels are responsible for violent crime and that the UK government “emptied their prisons” to allow mass migration. Jackie insists the unrest “isn’t about race”, pointing to her concern for a Black local family trapped in their home during the violence, but acknowledges the fear and suffering the unrest has inflicted on innocent people.

    Few residents are willing to speak openly about long-running rumors that loyalist paramilitary groups are involved in organizing the violence. Amid widespread poverty across the Sandy Row area, many locals acknowledge that organized crime groups profit from the instability and hold back community development. “Some of these areas have suffered from the baleful interests of loyalist paramilitaries and protection rackets,” explained Patrick Corrigan, head of nations and regions for Amnesty International. “Some of the investment has come from migrants because they set up little businesses and no one is competing with them.”

    While Belfast remains a deeply segregated city, split largely between Irish Catholic and Protestant communities, the past three years of summer violence have targeted a new group: Black and Brown migrant residents, not Catholic communities. For many long-term residents, the chaos echoes the worst violence of the Troubles. “History is repeating itself,” says John. Jackie recalls experiencing similar unrest as a child: “I got a flashback to when I was 11 years old, living up the road, when the soldiers were coming over, the petrol bombs were flying, and the fear of God was in me.”

    For Mohammed and Sultan, the violence in Belfast echoes the trauma they fled from Syria. Mohammed first became caught up in the 2011 Syrian uprising, and survived an airstrike in his hometown of Latakia in 2014 that left him with a permanent leg injury when he went out to buy food for his family. He claimed asylum in the UK, settled in Belfast, and gained citizenship in 2015; his wife joined him in 2018, and all six of his children were born in Northern Ireland. “I came here and I felt like I’m happy,” he says. Despite his injury qualifying him for disability benefits, he chose to work, holding a three-year position as a cook at KFC before opening his own shop. “I told myself it’s easy to open businesses here because there are no Arabic shops and rent is cheap.” He said he liked Belfast, liked the people, and understood the city’s complex history.

    Even so, the pair say there was not a single day operating the supermarket that did not bring some form of harassment. After the first attack in 2024, they rebuilt anyway, only to lose everything again. “The racist attacks are getting worse,” Sultan says. Official data from December 2025 confirms his observation: race hate crimes in Northern Ireland have reached their highest level since record-keeping began 20 years ago.

    Sultan, who grew up in Aleppo before the city was reduced to rubble by regime and Russian bombing, says local rioters have no understanding of the trauma he and Mohammed have already survived. “They have no idea what happened in Syria,” he says. Even so, his life is now rooted in Northern Ireland: he attended local schools, and has a Northern Irish girlfriend from a mixed Protestant-Catholic family who supports him. “My life is here now,” he says. “There are a lot of locals who look out for me. My girlfriend is amazing. Her family take care of me.”

    Despite the repeated destruction and rising danger, the two men have not given up entirely. They plan to make one more attempt to rebuild the Sham supermarket. “Life is not going to stop because some people burned a shop,” Sultan says.

  • Israeli firm BlackCore meddled in US and Scottish elections, French watchdog says

    Israeli firm BlackCore meddled in US and Scottish elections, French watchdog says

    A growing international scandal over suspected cross-border digital election meddling has expanded after France’s national disinformation watchdog Viginum confirmed that an Israeli cyber company already accused of sabotaging French local elections is also suspected of interference efforts in elections in New York City and Scotland, global news agency Reuters reported.

    The accusations were laid out publicly during a Thursday press conference that included French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu, where Viginum director Marc-Antoine Brillant stated that technical forensic investigations had pointed to Israeli cyber firm BlackCore as the actor behind the global influence operations. Brillant emphasized that the company’s pattern of covert meddling was not confined to France’s municipal election cycle.

    “This modus operandi was not limited to municipal elections in France,” Brillant told reporters. “It also appears to have been used to carry out foreign digital interference operations in other countries or regions, such as Angola, Togo, the elections in Scotland, and the 2025 municipal election in New York.”

    As it stands, however, French investigators have not been able to uncover who ultimately commissioned BlackCore to carry out the covert interference operations targeting French political candidates. Brillant acknowledged that ongoing probes have not yielded definitive answers about the identity of any hidden backers.

    “Our investigations did not make it possible to identify the sponsor or sponsors, if indeed they exist, behind this foreign digital interference,” he said.

    The first public allegations against BlackCore emerged last month, when French authorities tied the firm to a coordinated online smear campaign targeting three left-wing mayoral candidates from France Unbowed (LFI), a leftist party with explicit pro-Palestine positions. The covert interference campaign, first detected by Viginum in March, leveraged fake websites, inauthentic social media profiles, and targeted negative digital advertising to spread false criminal accusations—including claims of sexual assault—against candidates running in the cities of Marseille, Toulouse, and Roubaix.

    A subsequent joint investigation by French outlet *Libération* and Israeli newspaper Haaretz found digital traces of the operation on a server linked to BlackCore and two other Tel Aviv-based companies. Lecornu confirmed that the French government has formally requested that Israeli authorities provide explanations for BlackCore’s alleged activities and assist in identifying the hidden backers of the smear campaign.

    “I do not doubt for a single instant that if a French private group, from French soil moreover, had engaged in foreign digital interference in Israel, they would have done the same to its ambassador on site,” Lecornu added.

    Israel’s embassy in Paris has confirmed that French officials reached out regarding the case, noting that Israeli authorities are waiting to receive full details of the French investigation to launch their own internal inquiry.

    Notably, Brillant did not explicitly name the targets of the alleged interference in New York City’s 2025 election, which was won by Zohran Mamdani, a candidate well known for his public support of the Palestinian cause. Multiple relevant stakeholders, including Mamdani’s team, the New York Police Department, and the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, have not yet responded to Reuters’ requests for comment, while the Federal Bureau of Investigation declined to issue any statement on the matter.

    Viginum also confirmed that social media accounts linked to BlackCore targeted Scotland’s First Minister John Swinney, who has publicly labeled the humanitarian situation in Gaza a man-made catastrophe and warned that a genocide could be unfolding in the besieged territory.

    Before the allegations became public, BlackCore removed all of its public online presence following press inquiries. Prior to taking its website offline, the firm marketed itself as “an elite influence, cyber, and technology company built for the modern era of information warfare” that offered governments and political campaigns “cutting-edge strategies, advanced tools, and robust security to shape narratives.” BlackCore has not responded to multiple repeated requests for comment on the allegations from news organizations.

  • Is China really deflating deflation? It’s harder than Beijing thinks

    Is China really deflating deflation? It’s harder than Beijing thinks

    Amid growing optimism that China has turned the page on its 2025 deflation crisis, new analysis warns the foundations of this recovery remain fragile, drawing stark parallels to Japan’s 30-year battle with entrenched deflationary pressures that continues to hobble growth today.

    Official data from May shows China’s consumer price index climbing 1.2% year-on-year, while producer prices surged 3.9% driven by rising input costs for energy, semiconductors and industrial metals. Many economists have pointed to this uptick as the clearest evidence yet that the deflationary era is ending, giving way to a period of controlled reflation. But experts warn that surface-level inflation readings do not address deep structural imbalances that have kept deflationary sentiment alive, just as they did in Japan starting in the 1990s.

    Two critical structural reforms stand between Beijing and a durable end to weak price pressures, neither of which the Chinese government has pursued with urgent action. The first is resolving the ongoing deep-seated housing market crisis, which increasingly mirrors the bad-loan spiral that dragged down Japan’s economy starting in the 1990s. With roughly 70% of Chinese household wealth tied directly to real estate, stabilizing property markets across the country’s 70 largest cities is a non-negotiable prerequisite to reviving consumer spending and sustaining annual GDP growth between 4.5% and 5%, analysts note. The second priority is building a robust, nationwide social safety net that would allow China’s 1.4 billion citizens to feel secure enough to increase consumption instead of maintaining high precautionary savings.

    Japan’s decades-long experience serves as a critical cautionary tale for Chinese policymakers. Even as the Bank of Japan (BOJ) prepares to raise its benchmark interest rate to 1% next week – the farthest it has moved from the zero lower bound in more than 30 years – deep deflationary undercurrents still persist across the Japanese economy.

    On paper, Japan appears to have finally escaped its decades-long low-price trap: the BOJ projects full-year 2026 inflation will hit 2.8%, a reading that seems to confirm reflation is taking hold. But beneath the headline data, real wage growth remains negative, with earnings consistently lagging rising prices, and weakening domestic demand as a direct result. This has created a slow-burn stagflation dynamic, and Tokyo has still failed to implement the structural reforms needed to close the gap between rising living costs and stagnant household incomes.

    “For the Japanese economy to fully break free from its long-standing deflationary mindset, it’s imperative for the government and the central bank to align, articulate their risk assessments, maintain honest and transparent dialogue with financial markets, and resolutely execute bold, long-term growth investments,” said Toshihiro Nagahama, chief economist at the Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.

    Nagahama argues that today’s global economy is being shaped by an unusually dense web of overlapping shocks: the ongoing war in Ukraine, widespread volatility across the Middle East, and historic turning points in central bank monetary policy across major advanced economies. The connecting thread across these shifts is clear: geopolitical developments are now driving global economic outcomes, rather than the reverse. With the potential for expanded conflict in Iran creating major uncertainty, Nagahama warns that governments cannot anchor economic strategies to optimistic best-case scenarios. Instead, they must plan for worst-case risks, including the possibility of multi-year disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical energy chokepoint whose closure would reshape global energy trade flows and inflation dynamics for years to come.

    “While these shifts present a formidable trial for Japan, they also represent a historic opportunity,” Nagahama notes. “As the country sheds its decades-long deflationary mindset and restores nominal growth, these external shocks serve as a critical test for fully escaping the paradigm of contracting equilibrium.”

    Yet Japan may not get the sweeping policy rethink it needs to escape this trap. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s economic framework still relies heavily on the ultralow interest rates and weak yen policy that Tokyo has leaned on for nearly 30 years. That is why next week’s widely expected rate hike to 1% has already sparked pushback from Japanese political leaders who prefer the comfort of decades-old monetary policy over painful structural reform.

    The timing of the BOJ’s June 16 rate-setting meeting is awkward: it will proceed without Governor Kazuo Ueda, who has been hospitalized with a liver infection. Even so, Nomura economist Mari Iwashita notes that Ueda’s absence is unlikely to change the final outcome of the vote. Still, Takaichi’s administration has publicly pressured the BOJ to hold off on tightening. Last year, she even dismissed the idea of rate hikes as “stupid,” despite growing evidence that Japan’s 27-year experiment with near-zero interest rates has backfired. Her government is the 14th Japanese administration since the late 1990s to double down on a weak-yen strategy designed to boost exports and lift headline GDP.

    Far from reviving entrepreneurial and business confidence across Japan, this approach has dulled risk-taking incentives. Decades of near-free money reduced the urgency for policymakers to boost national competitiveness and for corporate leaders to pursue innovation, restructuring and calculated risk-taking. That long-running complacency is visible today: Japanese industry is watching uneasily as Chinese EV maker BYD upends the global electric vehicle market and Chinese AI firm DeepSeek reshapes the global artificial intelligence landscape – the same kind of disruptive innovation Japanese companies dominated back in the 1980s.

    Since taking office in October, Takaichi has shown little interest in breaking from this long-standing script. Her “Sanaenomics” agenda is essentially a continuation of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Abenomics framework, built on the same reliance on ultralow rates and a deliberately undervalued yen. The core problem with this approach is that Japan’s current inflation is not the healthy, demand-driven growth that policymakers once hoped for. It is fueled by high import costs for energy, food and other essential goods – classic cost-push inflation, not the demand-led price gains that signal rising household and business confidence. In short, it is unhealthy inflation that erodes living standards rather than reflecting broad-based growth.

    A strikingly similar dynamic is now unfolding in China. The gap between surging producer price inflation and muted consumer price growth is the widest it has been since June 2022. This divergence indicates that Chinese manufacturers are still struggling to pass higher input costs on to end consumers, leaving corporate profit margins under intense pressure. If this margin squeeze persists, it could have severe consequences for wage growth across the world’s second-largest $20 trillion economy, undermining household spending and weakening Beijing’s narrative of a successful end to deflation.

    This trajectory explains why Eurasia Group CEO Ian Bremmer began 2026 warning that “China’s deflation trap” would not disappear as easily as many optimistic analysts predict. Bremmer argues that Chinese leader Xi Jinping continues to prioritize political control and technological supremacy over the consumption stimulus and structural reforms that could break the deflationary cycle. “Beijing has the means to prevent a full-blown crisis, but living standards will deteriorate, the fallout will spread abroad, and the world’s second-largest economy will remain stuck in a trap of its own making,” Bremmer said.

    Five consecutive years of falling home prices have created “household wealth destruction on par with America’s 2008 crash, except it’s still accelerating,” Bremmer added. “Consumer confidence, investment, and domestic demand have cratered with it. Beijing bet big that high-tech manufacturing would fill the gap left by a contracting property sector. Instead, state-driven investment has created massive overcapacity, and weak domestic demand means there aren’t enough buyers to absorb the excess production.”

    One clear outcome of Beijing’s policy priorities is that too many Chinese firms are competing for a shrinking pool of domestic demand, forcing widespread price cuts to stay in business. “Margins collapse, forcing even well-run firms to cut wages and jobs to stay afloat,” Bremmer notes. “Workers spend less. Demand weakens further, so firms cut prices again. Meanwhile, debts grow harder to service with each turn of the cycle. Banks and local governments keep zombie firms alive — rolling over loans, protecting local champions — which keeps overcapacity entrenched.”

    Former U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2025 tariffs on Chinese goods made the situation even worse, closing off a critical export market and forcing Chinese firms to choose between cutting prices to find new buyers outside the U.S. or absorbing the extra costs of transshipping goods through third countries to access American consumers. Either choice further squeezes corporate margins, and today more than a quarter of all listed Chinese firms are unprofitable, the highest share in 25 years, creating a self-reinforcing debt-deflation cycle, Bremmer concludes.

    The core takeaway from decades of Japanese experience and current Chinese trends is that deflationary pressures can persist long after headline inflation turns positive, quietly eroding consumer and business confidence over time. This dynamic is why global markets are increasingly pricing in the possibility of monetary easing from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) in the coming months – a move that would likely weaken the yuan and widen China’s already large trade surplus.

    As Council on Foreign Relations economist Brad Setser puts it: “Of course, no one explicitly says they would welcome a bigger surplus. But if an international institution’s policy advice is monetary easing — to fight deflation — and fiscal consolidation because of off-balance-sheet risks, plus more exchange-rate flexibility, it is effectively advocating for the country to export its way out of its domestic troubles.”

    Beijing has so far been reluctant to allow sharp yuan depreciation, for three key strategic reasons. A stable or slowly appreciating currency reduces the risk of offshore debt defaults among heavily indebted Chinese property developers. It also supports Xi’s long-term ambition to position the yuan as a credible alternative reserve currency to the U.S. dollar. Finally, it helps manage trade tensions with the second Trump White House, which remains highly sensitive to any policy that appears to give Chinese exporters an unfair competitive advantage.

    Regardless of how 2026 unfolds for the Chinese economy, hopes that Xi’s administration has successfully defeated deflation could be heading for a sharp correction. Japan’s decades-long experience proves that even when headline economic data suggests reflation is gaining traction, the deeply entrenched deflationary mindset among households and businesses is extremely difficult to reverse.

  • Iran war is straining African airlines, industry body warns

    Iran war is straining African airlines, industry body warns

    NAIROBI, KENYA – The ongoing conflict in Iran has triggered a sharp upward swing in global jet fuel prices, amplifying existing supply chain pressures across African aviation and pushing regional carriers to re-evaluate their route networks. The crisis has laid bare a dangerous overreliance on imported refined jet fuel that leaves the continent’s airlines exposed to sudden global market shocks, according to the African Airlines Association (AFRAA).

    Long before the outbreak of the Iran war, African carriers already faced a steep cost disadvantage: AFRAA data shows they paid roughly 17% more for jet fuel than the global average. This new wave of price hikes has squeezed already razor-thin profit margins across the entire sector, putting significant strain on carrier balance sheets.

    “The impact is dire, a major shock for all our members,” AFRAA Secretary-General Abderahmane Berthe told the Associated Press in an interview. “Fuel makes up between 30% and 40% of an airline’s total operating costs. Any price increase hits their bottom line immediately.”

    The entire global aviation industry has turned its attention to the Strait of Hormuz, the critical global energy chokepoint that carried roughly one-fifth of the world’s total oil and refined fuel shipments before Iran effectively closed the waterway to commercial shipping when the war began in February. For African airlines, the fallout from this closure is far more severe than for carriers in other regions, due to longstanding structural weaknesses: higher baseline procurement costs and far smaller financial buffers to absorb unexpected market shocks.

    Berthe explained that while some airlines have introduced limited fuel surcharges to offset costs, most cannot pass the full brunt of price increases on to passengers for fear of crashing travel demand. Instead, they are forced to absorb the extra costs directly, eating into already limited profits.

    Supply disruptions have also sparked urgent concern at key African aviation hubs, including Nairobi in Kenya and Addis Ababa in Ethiopia, where consistent, reliable jet fuel access is non-negotiable for both regional and long-haul international operations. To adapt, a number of carriers have already begun restructuring their route networks: cutting flight frequencies, pausing service on low-demand routes, and reworking their entire schedules to mitigate rising costs and fuel supply uncertainty.

    The ongoing crisis has reignited longstanding calls for African nations to invest in expanding domestic petroleum refining capacity, to cut the continent’s heavy dependence on imported refined jet fuel. “We need African solutions to African problems,” Berthe emphasized. “Many African countries are major crude oil producers, yet we still rely entirely on non-African suppliers for the refined jet fuel our aviation sector needs to operate.”

    Attention is increasingly shifting to large-scale regional projects already in operation that could ease this dependency, most notably Nigeria’s giant Dangote Refinery. The facility is projected to become a major supplier of refined fuel across the continent, including to key aviation hubs in Kenya, Ethiopia, and South Africa. Already, major hubs like Addis Ababa have begun sourcing fuel from Dangote to stabilize supplies, a shift that Berthe says is already helping ease pressure on regional fuel supply chains amid the current crisis.

    Even amid these mounting pressures, demand for air travel across Africa remains robust. AFRAA projects annual passenger growth of roughly 6% for African carriers in coming years, a growth rate that outpaces many mature global aviation markets. Still, Berthe warned that prolonged market shocks from the Iran war could cause lasting damage to both airline profitability and cross-continental connectivity.

    “If this crisis drags on, the impact on African airlines will be very severe,” he said. “If Africa wants a truly resilient, sustainable aviation sector, it must secure its own fuel future.”