Breaking News 2 African Nations Have Been Hit With Military Coups In The Past Month





Senegal and Uzbekistan national team players were subjected to strict security searches on the tarmac of a US airport ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Viral footage showed players from both teams undergoing detailed inspections, including shoe removal, metal detector scans, and sniff dog checks, which sparked accusations of discrimination and comparisons to criminal treatment.

The Senegal Football Federation clarified that the procedure was a pre-planned logistical arrangement designed to bypass crowded airport terminals and facilitate boarding onto their private flight. However, FIFA and many fans criticized the optics, noting that similar high-profile European teams were not subjected to the same visible, public scrutiny.

Other African football figures also faced entry issues in the US, including:

  • Omar Abdulkadir Artan: The Somali referee, named CAF Referee of the Year, was denied entry despite holding a valid visa.
  • Talal Salah: Iraq’s team photographer was barred from entering the US.
  • Aymen Hussein: An Iraqi forward was detained and questioned for seven hours upon arrival.
 


The Alliance of Sahel States, comprising Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger, has vowed it will not be intimidated following a deadly attack on Niger’s main international airport. In a show of unity in Bamako, foreign ministers from the three military-led governments reaffirmed their commitment to their sovereignty project, insisting they will press ahead despite rising insecurity. Authorities in Niger blamed foreign-backed networks for attempts to destabilise the region, an accusation strongly denied by external actors. The attack, which left multiple security personnel dead and dozens of suspected attackers killed or arrested, has intensified political tensions across the Sahel. The bloc argues the violence fits into a wider pattern of interference aimed at undermining its political transition and security ambitions. Despite the unrest, the alliance is accelerating efforts to build joint political, economic, and military structures while distancing itself from traditional Western partners and deepening ties with alternative global powers.
 


Examine the shifting landscape of African geopolitics and how South Africa diplomacy is evolving on the global stage. Understand why the continent's diplomatic influence is changing.


This analysis evaluates South Africa's historical position as a primary voice for Africa in international courts and global forums. We look at how this role is currently being challenged and redefined as other nations assert their own diplomatic agendas. It is designed for those interested in understanding the current power dynamics shaping the continent today.


We also contrast these developments with the historical contributions of other nations, specifically referencing Nigeria foreign policy during the anti-apartheid struggle. By reviewing these past actions against modern developments, viewers gain a clearer picture of how African Union role expectations are being recalibrated. This breakdown clarifies the transition from a singular representative voice to a more diverse, multi-polar approach to international relations.


This documentary breaks down the growing contradiction at the heart of South African politics right now. We trace the June 30th deadline set by anti-migrant group March and March, the hospital blockades targeting undocumented Africans, and the historic debt Nigeria and Ghana say South Africa has forgotten from the anti-apartheid struggle. We also look at Limpopo Premier Dr. Phophi Ramathuba's public pushback, the Vatsonga community mistakenly targeted in the chaos, and why Ghana formally petitioned the African Union over what's happening.
If you care about Pan-Africanism, African unity, and the diaspora's role in building the continent's future, this is the conversation nobody else is having honestly.
Sources referenced in this video include reporting from Reuters, DW, Al Jazeera, GroundUp, Human Rights Watch, the International Commission of Jurists, and South Africa's own Department of International Relations and Cooperation. Full context for every claim is discussed in the video itself.

March and March is a South African civic movement founded in March 2024 by former radio presenter Jacinta Ngobese-Zuma to advocate for stricter enforcement of immigration laws and the deportation of undocumented foreign nationals. Headquartered in Durban, the organization gained national prominence in 2025 and 2026 through "gatekeeping" protests at public hospitals and a nationwide campaign demanding the government address illegal immigration.

The movement issued a 30 June 2026 deadline for undocumented immigrants to leave South Africa, which triggered nationwide protests across all nine provinces involving over 120 marches. While the majority of demonstrations on the deadline day were reported as peaceful under heavy police presence, the campaign caused significant panic among migrant communities and was linked to isolated incidents of xenophobic violence and property damage.

  • Core Mission: The group argues that undocumented immigration strains public services, healthcare, and employment opportunities, using the slogan "Mabahambe" (They must go).
  • Affiliations: Although claiming to be apolitical, the movement has collaborated with Operation Dudula, the Patriotic Alliance, and has informal links to the uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party.
  • Government Response: Ahead of the June 30 deadline, the South African government redirected R600 million to the police service to ensure operational readiness and protect citizens from
 




Julius Malema strongly challenges the claim that African migrants are responsible for unemployment in South Africa.
After hundreds of Ghanaians reportedly left the country, Malema asked a powerful question: “Show me the 300 jobs you created after the Ghanaians left.” Julius Malema speaks about unemployment, migration, xenophobia and the growing tension surrounding foreign nationals in South Africa. His argument is simple: if migrants were truly taking jobs from South Africans, where are the jobs that became available after they left?
 
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