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Tag: Angola

  • From Hunters to Guardians: Angolan Villagers Help to Save Endangered Sea Turtles

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    HOJIUA, Angola (Reuters) -Once a sea turtle hunter, Joaquim Avelino Fragoso now patrols Angola’s Longa estuary to protect the very creatures he once killed.

    “I like to watch the turtles when they come out to lay their eggs on land, and then go back into the sea,” Fragoso told Reuters in Hojiua village, a place of lush mangroves, lagoons and stretches of sand interspersed with bush and forests.

    “I no longer have that urge to hunt them,” said the 45-year-old, who used to kill sea turtles for their meat.

    The father of seven is among around 70 villagers who have been trained in conservation as part of a project to protect the turtles that ply Angola’s 1,600 km (1,000 mile) coastline. The local Kitabanga Project covers some 25,000 turtle nests overall.

    The message: that business as usual will mean there soon won’t be any turtles.

    “We have to conserve them so that there will be more turtles tomorrow,” said Fragoso, whose coastal home is about 220 km (135 miles) south of Angola’s capital, Luanda.

    All five species of eastern Atlantic sea turtle – which range from vulnerable to critically endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List – are found in Angolan waters.

    Longa’s caramel-coloured beaches are the nesting areas for the olive ridley turtle and the jellyfish-munching leatherback.

    The conservation project, funded by the private sector and implemented by non-governmental organisation Kissama Foundation and Universidade Agostinho Neto, Angola’s oldest university, trains communities to protect the endangered creatures.

    Persuading people to stop hunting requires addressing the poverty that gives rise to it and showing the economic gains that can come from wildlife protection, says Debora Carvalho, regional coordinator of Kitabanga Project in Cuanza Sul, where Longa is located.

    “The normal thing is that people say, no, we don’t care, …and then we need to talk, teach and show how this can be a very good thing for them, said Carvalho.

    Fragoso now earns money from his turtle conservation work.

    (Editing by Tim Cocks and Ros Russell)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

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  • Germany’s Steinmeier kicks off three-country Africa trip in Egypt

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    German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier arrived in Egypt on Saturday afternoon at the start of a nearly week-long trip to Africa that will also include stops in Ghana and Angola. No German head of state has ever visited Angola before him.

    Steinmeier last visited the African continent in December 2024.

    Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sissi had invited the German president to attend the official opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum in Cairo. This museum has been built within sight of the Pyramids of Giza.

    The archaeological museum exhibits more than 100,000 objects from the Pharaonic, Greek and Roman antiquity. For the first time, the complete burial equipment of the boy king Tutankhamun will be on display, including his golden death mask.

    Steinmeier was accompanied by his wife Elke Büdenbender at the museum opening.

    Talks on Middle East issues

    Steinmeier intends to use the opportunity in Cairo for bilateral talks with al-Sissi and other visiting world leaders.

    Immediately after his arrival in Cairo, Steinmeier met Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam.

    The discussions with both leaders were expected mainly to focus on the situation in the Middle East following the fragile ceasefire between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist organization Hamas.

    According to the Office of the Federal President in Berlin, with the subsequent visits to Ghana and Angola, Steinmeier aims to acknowledge the regional commitment of both states to stability and peace in West Africa.

    The political partnership with them is to be strengthened, and cooperation in the fields of economy, science and culture is to be expanded, it said.

    Both Ghana and Angola are political heavyweights in their region and could also hold their own economically in the current turbulent global economic situation, the presidential office added.

    Close development cooperation with Accra

    Politically, Ghana is a stable democracy and therefore a haven of peace in West Africa. There has been close development cooperation between Germany and Ghana for decades.

    Steinmeier already visited Ghana as president in 2017, but Angola has never before been visited by a German head of state.

    Angola is also seen as an important political and economic partner in Berlin. The country currently holds the chairmanship of the African Union (AU), the most important association of African states with 55 members.

    Angola is rich in resources

    Angola is the world’s fourth largest diamond producer and has large, barely tapped deposits of critical raw materials that are also needed by the German economy. Angola is an oil-rich country, with 90% of its exports being crude oil.

    Germany also mainly sources oil and gas from this country of some 38 million people.

    Steinmeier is accompanied on his trip by a business delegation.

    German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and his wife Elke Buedenbender greeted by Minister for the Public Sector Mohamed Shimy (R) at Cairo International Airport, upon their arrival to attend the opening ceremony of the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM). Bernd von Jutrczenka/dpa

    German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier (L) meets with Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam in a hotel, on the occasion of the opening ceremony of the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM). Bernd von Jutrczenka/dpa

    German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier (L) meets with Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam in a hotel, on the occasion of the opening ceremony of the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM). Bernd von Jutrczenka/dpa

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  • I was kidnapped by machete-wielding tribesman but still ran length of Africa

    I was kidnapped by machete-wielding tribesman but still ran length of Africa

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    HE used to claim he was the “Hardest Geezer” in the Sussex seaside town of Worthing.

    Now Russ Cook has proved he is the hardest geezer in the world — by becoming the first man in history to run the entire length of Africa.

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    Russ Cook has become the first man in history to run the entire length of Africa – and vowed not to cut his hair or beard until he was finishedCredit: Reuters
    The 'hardest geezer' of Worthing made it from South Africa to Tunisia after 352 dys

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    The ‘hardest geezer’ of Worthing made it from South Africa to Tunisia after 352 dysCredit: Instagram / hardestgeezer
    Russ set off from Cape Africa’s southernmost point, Cape Agulhas, where the Indian and Atlantic oceans meet

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    Russ set off from Cape Africa’s southernmost point, Cape Agulhas, where the Indian and Atlantic oceans meet

    His 9,891-mile trek from Cape Town to Tunisia, where he crossed the finish line today, spanned 352 days and was the equivalent of 377 marathons.

    Russ, 27, battled injuries, food poisoning, extreme heat and cold, a kidnapping and robbery.

    It took 19million steps and 20 pairs of trainers to complete the epic feat through 16 countries.

    He set off from Cape Africa’s southernmost point, Cape Agulhas, where the Indian and Atlantic oceans meet, on April 22, 2023, vowing not to cut his hair or beard until he crossed the finish line in Bizerte in Tunisia.

    The huge red beard and ponytail he grew during the trek earned him the nickname “Africa’s Forrest Gump”, in a nod to the Tom Hanks blockbuster.

    A former big boozer and gambler, Russ turned his life around at 19 after a pal challenged him to run the Brighton half marathon.

    He says: “I was in a bad place and my mate knew it. I was unfit and drinking and blowing money in the bookies, so I agreed to run it.

    “After that, I did the Brighton marathon. Through training, I learnt the values of running and discipline and self-belief, which empowered me, and I applied it to other things in life.”

    Realising he would never win marathons, the ex-cleaner decided to set himself endurance challenges. In 2019, he ran 71 marathons through 11 countries between Asia and London, with little more than a backpack and a hammock. It took him just 66 days.

    ‘It’s been the toughest days of my life’

    In 2020, he broke the world record for the fastest marathon while pulling a car.

    He ran 26 miles along Worthing seafront with a 730kg Suzuki Alto attached to a rope around his waist in 9hr and 56min, knocking 9hr 40min off the record of 19hrs.

    Kelvin Kiptum wins London Marathon with second fastest ever time
    Russ has been compared to beloved Tom Hanks character Forrest Gump

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    Russ has been compared to beloved Tom Hanks character Forrest GumpCredit: Alamy
    An exhausted Russ rehydrates with power drinks

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    An exhausted Russ rehydrates with power drinksCredit: Instagram / hardestgeezer

    Then, in 2021, Russ was buried alive for a week in a box with just 20 litres of water and a ventilation tube.

    He also became the first to complete a marathon on crutches and crossed the finish line of another 26-mile race drunk because he stopped every mile to sink a beer.

    Russ came up with the idea of running across Africa during Covid, in a bid to raise £1million for charities supporting refugees and rough sleepers.

    Incredibly, he had raised over £700,000 earlier tonight.

    He says: “People reckon I’m nuts but, if I want to do something, I will do it regardless of how outlandish it seems.

    I have passed blood for six days and suffered awful food poisoning, a bad back that only painkillers could cure, had visa nightmares, dehydration and suffered exhaustion

    Russ Cook

    “Quitting never even came into it. Not even thought of it.

    “I decided to run Africa for my personal achievement and have some mad stories to tell — and I bloody well did it.

    “I did it first and that makes me so proud. This was all about how far I could push my limits. It is more than just running across a whole continent.

    “When I started running, I didn’t like long distances, but I taught my body to get to the point where it could quite comfortably run all day long without much difficulty.

    “Then came Africa. The blazing heat in the day and the freezing cold at night.

    “Running on sand, through jungles, through sandstorms and snow storms and torrential downpours.

    “I have passed blood for six days and suffered awful food poisoning, a bad back that only painkillers could cure, had visa nightmares, dehydration and suffered exhaustion.”

    In November, Russ was forced to visit medics in Nigeria for scans as his back pain became “excruciating”.

    Russ being scanned after his back pain became 'excruciating'

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    Russ being scanned after his back pain became ‘excruciating’Credit: Instagram / hardestgeezer

    He says: “It got very bloody hard at times, but I would tell myself to stop moaning like a little weasel and get on the road and get that zombie stomp going.”

    Recalling the simple things that inspired him to keep going, Russ adds: “These 352 days have been the toughest of my life, but also such an immense honour.

    “I have met incredible people every single day in every single country who welcomed us.

    “Seeing all the kids running out to jog with us has been wonderful.

    “But, in some remote areas, being white with a big red beard and red hair, I did terrify a few kids!”

    As his epic trek neared an end, Russ focused on his home comforts. He says: “My body was starting to break down. Everything hurt. My legs felt like they were about to fall off. Just a few more days, I said.

    “Now it’s time to party and the daiquiris will be flowing. It will be good to get into a real crisp bed and have a long hot soak in a bath.”

    During his African epic, Russ would sleep in a support vehicle driven by his pals Harry Gallimore and Stan Gaskell.

    It also carried their video gear, to record the world record attempt, and was their link to his social media channels on YouTube, X and Instagram.

    Russ ran an average of 30 miles a day, including 90 days through the Sahara Desert.

    As it was 50C in the day, he ran at night, though it was sometimes still 25C.

    My body was starting to break down. Everything hurt. My legs felt like they were about to fall off

    Russ Cook

    He endured snow storms in Algeria and monsoons in rainforests.

    In the Congo, tribal natives wielding machetes kidnapped him on day 102 last August.

    Russ — who feared they could be cannibals — had been separated from his support vehicle due to the terrain.

    He stumbled into a rural settlement as he headed for their rendezvous point.

    He recalls: “There was a chief there who told me I must give him money. I told him I had none.

    “Pretty soon I found myself surrounded by lots of blokes with machetes, who escorted me into the bush.

    “I didn’t know what they were going to do, so I emptied my bag to show I had nothing but a biscuit, and gave it to them.

    “Then I ran for it, bushwhacking through jungle paths. I kept off any tracks until I was far away.

    “Then, suddenly, two men pulled up on a motorbike and took me on a seven-hour ride into the jungle and I was thinking, ‘Is this it?’.

    “I thought, ‘Here is the self-proclaimed Hardest Geezer being held in a Congo gulag before being ripped apart limb by limb by these people and eaten’.”

    Russ was able to negotiate with his kidnappers during a two day ordeal, and his team paid a ransom.

    It came weeks after Russ — who also suffered a week of food poisoning and bouts of diarrhoea — was help up by armed maniacs in Angola on day 64 last June.

    I thought, ‘Here is the self-proclaimed Hardest Geezer being held in a Congo gulag before being ripped apart limb by limb by these people and eaten’

    Russ Cook

    He had jumped into the support van for lunch at the roadside unaware they were being watched by gunmen planning to rob them.

    He posted on X: “Nothing like a gun being pointed in your face to let you know you are alive.

    “It was like any other day when a couple of lads pop open the side door and demanded everything we have.

    “None of us got killed or injured. We did lose a lot of our gear. Losing our passports was the big blow as it had our visas to move onwards with.

    “It was a nightmare trying to get it sorted in Angola so we had to halt the challenge for two weeks and drive back to Namibia to get new passports and visas.

    “That was 1,281 miles back to Windhoek to sort the paperwork and 1,281 miles back to the start.”

    Russ admits the terrifying experiences were a real eye-opener.

    He says: “One of the reasons I wanted to run the length of Africa is because no one has ever done it before.

    “After the robbery and kidnapping, I was starting to find out why.

    “But 99 per cent of the time people were so good to us, giving us food and help and donating by going to ATMs and giving us cash.”

    From South Africa, Russ ran along the west coast up through Namibia, Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of Congo, Cameroon, Nigeria, Benin, Togo, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Guinea, Senegal, Mauritania, and Algeria, before finishing in Tunisia just under a year later.

    Supporters joined Russ for the final leg of the challenge

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    Supporters joined Russ for the final leg of the challengeCredit: AFP – Getty
    Other fans waited for him while wearing red beards

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    Other fans waited for him while wearing red beardsCredit: Reuters
    Russ pictured at the finish line

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    Russ pictured at the finish lineCredit: Reuters

    But a problem securing a visa to cross the border into Algeria almost scuppered his challenge on day 278.

    After a four day stalemate and pleas on social media, the UK’s Algerian embassy offered courtesy visas.

    For his final 29.3-mile stretch — in which he completed in 4hr 47min — Russ had invited social media followers to run with him or wait at the finishing line. Some turned up wearing fake red beards.

    And he revealed he couldn’t wait to be reunited with his girlfriend.

    He says: “I warned the girls and boys to get the daiquiris set up.

    “Nothing was going to stop me, even if I had to crawl my way over broken glass to get to the very end.

    “Not too bad for a former fat lad with booze and gambling issues.”

    Paying tribute to his partner on X, he added: “My girl is an absolute diamond. Put her through the emotional wringer daily. Deserves the world and everything in it.

    “Can’t wait to share a strawberry daiquiri with her on a Tunisian beach and tell her how beautiful she is.

    “Would be in a mental asylum in Congo without her.”

    Russ takes a dip after finishing the trek

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    Russ takes a dip after finishing the trekCredit: sky News
    Russ' journey in full

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    Russ’ journey in full

    RUSS’S Project Africa challenge will bring a massive funding boost to two amazing causes – and it is easy for you to pledge your support.

    One beneficiary, The Running Charity, works to transform the lives of young people affected by homelessness and multiple or complex needs.

    The other, Sandblast, helps Sahrawi refugees. To donate, visit: givestar.io/gs/projectafrica

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    Mike Ridley

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  • Deal ‘with the devil’: Meet the Cubans who’ve joined Russia’s war on Ukraine

    Deal ‘with the devil’: Meet the Cubans who’ve joined Russia’s war on Ukraine

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    What César really wanted was to get out of Cuba. A bartender struggling to make ends meet in Havana, he tried last year to reach Miami in a rickety boat but was forced to abandon the attempt when he was intercepted by the U.S. Coast Guard.

    He’s now preparing a second escape attempt: with a direct flight to Moscow. His ticket has been paid for by a Russian recruiter but it comes with a hefty price tag nonetheless: As part of the deal, he will have to join the Russian army and fight in Ukraine.

    “If this is the sacrifice I have to make for my family to get ahead, I’ll do it,”  said César, who turned 19 this year and whose name has been changed to protect his identity.

    “You can be a nuclear physicist and still die of hunger here,” he said. “With my current salary I can barely buy basic things like toilet paper or milk.” He said he hoped he would be allowed to work as a paramedic.

    The news of Cuban fighters in Ukraine splashed across global headlines earlier this month when Havana announced it had arrested 17 people for involvement in a human trafficking ring recruiting young men to fight for Russia.

    The news raised questions about the extent of cooperation between the two Cold War allies, and whether cracks were beginning to show in Havana’s support for Russia’s invasion.

    Conversations with Cubans in Cuba and Russia reveal a different side of the story: of desperate young men who see enlistment in the Russian army as their best shot at a better life — even if not all of them seem to know what they were getting themselves into.

    One recruit in his late 40s in the Russian city of Tula, whom we will call Pedro, said he was promised a job as a driver “for workers and construction material” but on arrival in Russia was being prepared for combat, weapon in hand.

    “We signed a contract with the devil,” he said, recalling the moment he enlisted. “And the devil does not hand out sweets.”

    Cold-war allies

    Until recently, Havana — though formally neutral on Ukraine — made no secret of siding with Moscow in what it called its clash with the “Yankee empire.” The Castro regime is dependent on Russia for cheap fuel and other aid. But unlike, say, North Korea, it has little to offer in return other than diplomatic loyalty.

    Since the Kremlin launched its full-scale assault last year, the countries have exchanged visits by top brass.

    Critics have warned that, keeping with Soviet tradition, Cuba could send troops to help fight Moscow’s cause. They point to a May visit to Belarus by Cuba’s military attaché, where the “training of Cuban military personnel” was top of the agenda, and a trip to Moscow by Cuba’s defense minister several weeks later to discuss “a number of technical military projects.” But there has been no evidence of direct involvement.

    Havana’s crackdown on the recruitment network followed the publication of an interview on YouTube in late August, in which two 19-year-old Cubans claimed they had been lured to Russia for lucrative construction jobs, only to be sent to the trenches in Ukraine. They said they had suffered beatings, been scammed out of their money and were being kept captive.

    Cuba’s foreign ministry vowed to act “energetically” against efforts to entice Cubans to join Russia’s war effort, adding: “Cuba is not part of the conflict in Ukraine.”

    The change in tone in Havana suggests that the recruitment of Cubans through informal backchannels has “hit a nerve,” said Christopher Sabatini, a senior fellow for Latin America at Chatham House. 

    “Cuba and the Soviet Union fought side by side in Angola and other places, but for ideological reasons,” he said. “Now it’s boiled down to the ugliest, most mercenary terms, giving it a transactional quality that goes against decades of friendship.”

    In November 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree offering fast-tracked naturalization to foreigners who signed up as contract soldiers. “We are all getting Russian citizenship,” one recruit texted this reporter. That week, he and others told POLITICO, some 15 recruits, some of whom had been in Russia for only a couple of months, had been personally handed their passports by the local governor.

    With heavy losses in Ukraine, Russia “needs the cannon fodder,” said Pavel Luzin, a senior fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA). He added most foreign recruits come from Central Asian and African countries, Syria and Afghanistan.

    It is unclear exactly how many foreign citizens have joined Russia’s ranks. But Luzin says their limited numbers mainly serve to boost Russia’s narrative that it has international support for its war.

    “Without speaking the language, knowing the local terrain, or the right training for modern warfare, they’ll be swiftly killed and that’s it,” he said. 

    Joining the 106th

    For most of the Cubans with whom POLITICO spoke, their involvement with the Russian army began in late 2022, when somebody using the name Elena Shuvalova began posting on social media pages targeting Cubans looking to go abroad or already in Russia.

    One post showed a woman in a long skirt in front of a car decorated with a Cuban flag and a “Z,” Russia’s pro-war symbol. In the accompanying text, Shuvalova offered a one-year contract with the Russian army, “help” with the required language exams and medical tests, and “express legalization within two days.”

    Pay consisted of a one-off handout of 195,000 rubles (about $2,000) followed by a monthly salary of 204,000 rubles ($2,100). By comparison, Cuba’s average GDP per capita in 2020 was $9,500 per year. 

    Of the four recruits currently in Russia who shared their stories with POLITICO, three said they had been flown in from Cuba this summer. At home, they worked in hospitality, teaching and construction. One said he had a professional military background. Two others had completed two years of standard compulsory military service.

    While they knew they would be employed by Russia’s military, they were reassured that they would be working far from the front line as drivers or construction workers. “To dig fortifications or help rebuild cities,” one recruit’s exasperated wife told POLITICO.

    Because they could face charges of joining a mercenary group in Cuba or of treason or espionage in Russia for talking to a reporter, POLITICO changed the names of the recruits quoted in this story.

    Each of them said they were flown in from Varadero along with several dozen other men. They said their passports were not stamped on departure, and that upon entering Russia their migration cards were marked “tourism” as their purpose of stay.

    On landing at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport, the recruits were met by a woman who introduced herself as Diana, who said she was a Cuban with Russian ties. They were then loaded onto a bus and brought to what one recruit described as “an empty school building” near Ryazan, a city in western Russia 200 kilometers southeast of Moscow. 

    There, they underwent a cursory medical check and were subject to a mountain of red tape, including the signing of a contract with the Russian defense ministry. One recruit said a Spanish version of the text was made available to those who specifically requested it, but others said that a translator simply summarized its content verbally.

    The recruits said that some of the new arrivals remained behind at a military unit in Ryazan. But most were transferred to the 106th Guards Airborne, a division based in the city of Tula near Moscow that has been deployed into some of the fiercest fighting in Ukraine.

    Kyiv claims the 106th was largely “reduced to fertilizer” in the early days of the invasion when it tried to capture Kyiv. In recent months, it has been stationed around Soledar and Bakhmut, hotspots in eastern Ukraine.

    “When they handed us the uniform and told us to go train I realized this was not about construction at all,” one recruit said. By then, however, he was locked in.

    A legal adviser who is well-known within Russia’s Cuban community told POLITICO he has delivered the same tough message to scores of Cuban recruits who have appealed to him for help: “Once you’ve signed the contract, defecting is tantamount to treason.” 

    When POLITICO spoke to Pedro in Tula, he said he felt trapped by his decision. 

    “I came here to give my children a better life, not to kill,” he said, breaking down into tears. “I won’t fire a single bullet.” 

    He added he had considered trying to escape. “But where do I go?”

    On landing at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport, the recruits were met by a woman who introduced herself as Diana, who said she was a Cuban with Russian ties | Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP via Getty Images

    Willing participants

    POLITICO could not determine whether Shuvalova or Diana were working for Russian or Cuban authorities. Neither woman responded to requests for comment — though Shuvalova told journalists at the Russian-language Moscow Times that she worked pro-bono.

    While the Cuban Embassy in Moscow did not respond to multiple requests for comment, the government itself has sent mixed messages. Shortly after Cuba’s announcement that it had broken up the human trafficking ring, Havana’s ambassador to Moscow told the state-run RIA agency that “we have nothing against Cubans who just want to sign a contract and legally take part in this operation.”

    Russia’s defense ministry did not respond to a request for comment.

    It’s not easy to tell just how many Cuban citizens have joined the Russian military.

    In conversations with POLITICO, the recruits said roughly 140 Cubans were currently in Tula. And a caller to a Miami-based Spanish-language television channel in early September said that he had some 90 Cubans under his command in Ryazan.

    A trove of 198 hacked documents, allegedly belonging to recent Cuban recruits and published online by the Ukrainian website Informnapalm, showed the ages of those who joined the Russian army ranged between 19 to 69 years old. More than 50 of the passports were issued in June and July this year.

    Not all Cubans POLITICO spoke to said they had been tricked into joining the war. In photos shared online and in messenger apps, many pose proudly in military gear, some carrying weapons. 

    “No one put a gun to their heads,” Yoenni Vega Gonzalez, 36, a Cuban migrant in Russia, said of his acquaintances in Ukraine. “The contract makes it clear that you’re going to war, not to play ball or camping.”

    He said he had been refused the opportunity to join because he does not speak Russian. “Otherwise, I would have gone [to the front] with pride and my head held high.”

    During the reporting of this article, several Cubans still on the island reached out saying they wanted to enlist. All cited economic, and not political, reasons as their core motivation.

    Accounts of daily life behind the fences of the training sites differed greatly.

    Some recruits described their interaction with the Russians as friendly and the atmosphere as relaxed. In their free time they smoked cigarettes and sipped on Coca-Cola (officially not available in either Cuba or Russia). On the weekends they went sightseeing and reveled in the city’s bars.

    But those who say they were tricked into service, seemingly a minority, complain about payment delays and said they are threatened with incarceration for resisting orders.

    When asked about the moral implications of his decision, one recruit in Tula said it wasn’t his primary concern.

    “This is the way we found to get out of Cuba,” he said. “No one here wants to kill anyone. But neither do we want to die ourselves.”

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  • Macron lays out ‘new era’ for France’s reduced presence in Africa

    Macron lays out ‘new era’ for France’s reduced presence in Africa

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    French President Emmanuel Macron called on Monday for his country to build “a new, balanced relationship” with Africa, as the former colonial power seeks to reduce its military presence on the continent.

    “The objective of this new era is to deploy our security presence in a partnership-based approach,” Macron said in a speech in Paris, ahead of a tour that will take him to Gabon, Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Congo later this week.

    In the future, French military bases on the continent will be “co-administered” with local personnel, the French president said, while there will be a “visible decrease” in the number of French troops stationed in Africa over the next few months.

    The news comes as France has faced increasing opposition from local governments over its continued military presence in several of its former colonies, and was forced to withdraw hundreds of troops from Mali, the Central African Republic and Burkina Faso over the past year. Around 5,000 French soldiers remain stationed on various bases throughout the continent.

    But Paris’ waning influence — particularly in the Sahel region — has also allowed Russia to expand its reach in Africa, including in the digital sphere through the use of disinformation campaigns, as well as on the ground with mercenaries from the Wagner group, who in some cases have replaced French soldiers.

    The French president said his country would steer away from “anachronistic” power struggles in Africa, saying African countries should be considered as “partners,” both militarily and economically.

    “Africa isn’t [anyone’s] backyard, even less so a continent where Europeans and French should dictate its framework for development,” Macron said.

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    Nicolas Camut

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  • Europe is running out of medicines

    Europe is running out of medicines

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    When you’re feeling under the weather, the last thing you want to do is trek from pharmacy to pharmacy searching for basic medicines like cough syrup and antibiotics. Yet many people across Europe — faced with a particularly harsh winter bug season — are having to do just that.

    Since late 2022, EU countries have been reporting serious problems trying to source certain important drugs, with a majority now experiencing shortages. So just how bad is the situation and, crucially, what’s being done about it? POLITICO walks you through the main points.

    How bad are the shortages?

    In a survey of groups representing pharmacies in 29 European countries, including EU members as well as Turkey, Kosovo, Norway and North Macedonia, almost a quarter of countries reported more than 600 drugs in short supply, and 20 percent reported 200-300 drug shortages. Three-quarters of the countries said shortages were worse this winter than a year ago. Groups in four countries said that shortages had been linked to deaths.

    It’s a portrait backed by data from regulators. Belgian authorities report nearly 300 medicines in short supply. In Germany that number is 408, while in Austria more than 600 medicines can’t be bought in pharmacies at the moment. Italy’s list is even longer — with over 3,000 drugs included, though many are different formulations of the same medicine.

    Which medicines are affected?

    Antibiotics — particularly amoxicillin, which is used to treat respiratory infections — are in short supply. Other classes of drugs, including cough syrup, children’s paracetamol, and blood pressure medicine, are also scarce.

    Why is this happening?

    It’s a mix of increased demand and reduced supply.

    Seasonal infections — influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) first and foremost — started early and are stronger than usual. There’s also an unusual outbreak of throat disease Strep A in children. Experts think the unusually high level of disease activity is linked to weaker immune systems that are no longer familiar with the soup of germs surrounding us in daily life, due to lockdowns. This difficult winter, after a couple of quiet years (with the exception of COVID-19), caught drugmakers unprepared.

    Inflation and the energy crisis have also been weighing on pharmaceutical companies, affecting supply.

    Last year, Centrient Pharmaceuticals, a Dutch producer of active pharmaceutical ingredients, said its plant was producing a quarter less output than in 2021 due to high energy costs. In December, InnoGenerics, another manufacturer from the Netherlands, was bailed out by the government after declaring bankruptcy to keep its factory open.

    Commissioner Stella Kyriakides wrote to Greece’s health minister asking him to take into consideration the effects of bans on third countries | Stephanie Lecocq/EPA-EFE

    The result, according to Sandoz, one of the largest producers on the European generics market, is an especially “tight supply situation.” A spokesperson told POLITICO that other culprits include scarcity of raw materials and manufacturing capacity constraints. They added that Sandoz is able to meet demand at the moment, but is “facing challenges.”

    How are governments reacting?

    Some countries are slamming the brakes on exports to protect domestic supplies. In November, Greece’s drugs regulator expanded the list of medicine whose resale to other countries — known as parallel trade — is banned. Romania has temporarily stopped exports of certain antibiotics and kids’ painkillers. Earlier in January, Belgium published a decree that allows the authorities to halt exports in case of a crisis.

    These freezes can have knock-on effects. A letter from European Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides addressed to Greece’s Health Minister Thanos Plevris asked him to take into consideration the effects of bans on third countries. “Member States must refrain from taking national measures that could affect the EU internal market and prevent access to medicines for those in need in other Member States,” wrote Kyriakides.

    Germany’s government is considering changing the law to ease procurement requirements, which currently force health insurers to buy medicines where they are cheapest, concentrating the supply into the hands of a few of the most price-competitive producers. The new law would have buyers purchase medicines from multiple suppliers, including more expensive ones, to make supply more reliable. The Netherlands recently introduced a law requiring vendors to keep six weeks of stockpiles to bridge shortages, and in Sweden the government is proposing similar rules.

    At a more granular level, a committee led by the EU’s drugs regulator, the European Medicines Agency (EMA), has recommended that rules be loosened to allow pharmacies to dispense pills or medicine doses individually, among other measures. In Germany, the president of the German Medical Association went so far as to call for the creation of informal “flea markets” for medicines, where people could give their unused drugs to patients who needed them. And in France and Germany, pharmacists have started producing their own medicines — though this is unlikely to make a big difference, given the extent of the shortfall.

    Can the EU fix it?

    In theory, the EU should be more ready than ever to tackle a bloc-wide crisis. It has recently upgraded its legislation to deal with health threats, including a lack of pharmaceuticals. The EMA has been given expanded powers to monitor drug shortages. And a whole new body, the Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Authority (HERA) has been set up, with the power to go on the market and purchase drugs for the entire bloc.

    But not everyone agrees that it’s that bad yet.

    Last Thursday, the EMA decided not to ask the Commission to declare the amoxycillin shortage a “major event” — an official label that would have triggered some (limited) EU-wide action— saying that current measures are improving the situation.

    A European Medicines Agency’s working group on shortages could decide on Thursday whether to recommend that the Commission declares the drug shortages a “major event” — an official label that would trigger some (limited) EU-wide action. An EMA steering group for shortages would have the power to request data on drug stocks of the drugs and production capacity from suppliers, and issue recommendations on how to mitigate shortages.

    At an appearance before the European Parliament’s health committee, the Commission’s top health official, Sandra Gallina, said she wanted to “dismiss a bit the idea that there is a huge shortage,” and said that alternative medications are available to use.

    And others believe the situation will get better with time. “I think it will sort itself out, but that depends on the peak of infections,” said Adrian van den Hoven, director general of generics medicines lobby Medicines for Europe. “If we have reached the peak, supply will catch up quickly. If not, probably not a good scenario.”

    Helen Collis and Sarah-Taïssir Bencharif contributed reporting.

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    Carlo Martuscelli

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  • ‘Merchant of Death’ Viktor Bout now part of a deal himself

    ‘Merchant of Death’ Viktor Bout now part of a deal himself

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    MOSCOW — Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout, swapped Thursday for WNBA star Brittney Griner, is widely known abroad as the “Merchant of Death” who fueled some of the world’s worst conflicts.

    In Russia, however, he’s seen as a swashbuckling businessman who was unjustly imprisoned after an overly aggressive U.S. sting operation.

    The 2005 Nicolas Cage movie “Lord of War” was loosely based on Bout, a former Soviet air force officer who gained fame supposedly by supplying weapons for civil wars in South America, the Middle East and Africa. His clients were said to include Liberia’s Charles Taylor, longtime Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi and both sides in Angola’s civil war.

    On Thursday, the U.S. and Russia announced that Griner had been exchanged for Bout, and that he was headed home.

    Russia had pressed for Bout’s release for years and as speculation grew about such a deal, the upper house of parliament opened a display of paintings he made in prison – whose subjects ranged from Soviet dictator Josef Stalin to a kitten.

    The show of his art underlined Bout’s complexities. Though in a bloody business, the 55-year-old was a vegetarian and classical music fan who is said to speak six languages.

    Even the former federal judge who sentenced him in 2011 thought his 11 years behind bars was adequate punishment.

    “He’s done enough time for what he did in this case,” Shira A. Scheindlin told The Associated Press in July as prospects for his release appeared to rise.

    Griner, who was arrested at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport in February after vape canisters containing cannabis oil were found in her luggage, was sentenced in August to nine years in prison. Washington protested her sentence as disproportionate, and some observers suggested that trading an arms merchant for someone jailed for a small amount of drugs would be a poor deal.

    Bout was convicted in 2011 on terrorism charges. Prosecutors said he was ready to sell up to $20 million in weapons, including surface-to-air missiles to shoot down U.S. helicopters. When they made the claim at his 2012 sentencing, Bout shouted: “It’s a lie!”

    Bout has steadfastly proclaimed his innocence, describing himself as a legitimate businessman who didn’t sell weapons.

    Bout’s case fit well into Moscow’s narrative that Washington sought to trap and oppress innocent Russians on flimsy grounds.

    “From the resonant Bout case, a real ‘hunt’ by Americans for Russian citizens around the world has unfolded,” the government newspaper Rossiiskaya Gazeta wrote last year.

    Increasingly, Russia cited his case as a human rights issue. His wife and lawyer claimed his health deteriorated in the harsh prison environment where foreigners are not always eligible for breaks that Americans might receive.

    Bout had not been scheduled to be released until 2029. He was held in a medium-security facility in Marion, Illinois.

    “He got a hard deal,” said Scheindlin, the retired judge, noting the U.S. sting operatives “put words in his mouth” so he’d say he was aware Americans could die from weapons he sold in order to require a terrorism enhancement that would force a long prison sentence, if not a life term.

    Scheindlin gave Bout the mandatory minimum 25-year sentence but said she did so only because it was required.

    At the time, his defense lawyer claimed the U.S. targeted Bout vindictively because it was embarrassed that his companies helped deliver goods to American military contractors involved in the war in Iraq.

    The deliveries occurred despite United Nations sanctions imposed against Bout since 2001 because of his reputation as a notorious illegal arms dealer.

    Prosecutors had urged Scheindlin to impose a life sentence, saying that if Bout was right to call himself nothing more than a businessman, “he was a businessman of the most dangerous order.”

    Bout was estimated to be worth about $6 billion in March 2008 when he was arrested in Bangkok, Thailand. U.S. authorities tricked him into leaving Russia for what he thought was a meeting over a business deal to ship what prosecutors described as “a breathtaking arsenal of weapons — including hundreds of surface-to-air missiles, machine guns and sniper rifles — 10 million rounds of ammunition and five tons of plastic explosives.”

    He was taken into custody at a Bangkok luxury hotel after conversations with the Drug Enforcement Administration sting operation’s informants who posed as officials of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, also known as the FARC. The group had been classified by Washington as a narco-terrorist group.

    He was brought to the U.S. in November 2010.

    The “Merchant of Death” moniker was attached to Bout by a high-ranking minister of Britain’s Foreign Office. The nickname was included in the U.S. government’s indictment of Bout.

    ———

    Associated Press writer Larry Neumeister in New York contributed.

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  • East Congo crisis summit issues call for Friday cease-fire

    East Congo crisis summit issues call for Friday cease-fire

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    LUANDA, Angola (AP) — Leaders called for a cease-fire to take effect later this week in eastern Congo following a summit in Angola on Wednesday that included Congo’s president and Rwanda’s foreign minister but not the M23 rebels whose rapid advance has sharply escalated tensions between the two countries.

    In a statement, participants said the Friday evening cease-fire would be followed by a rebel withdrawal from the major towns that are currently under M23 control — Bunagana, Rutshuru and Kiwanja.

    “If M23 refuses to disengage and liberate all the territory they currently holds, the (East African Community bloc) heads of state will instruct the regional forces to pressure them into submission,” said the statement released following the summit in Angola.

    A contingent of Kenyan troops already has deployed to eastern Congo as part of the regional force agreed to back in June. It also will eventually include two battalions from Uganda, two from Burundi and one from South Sudan.

    However, the M23 rebel group showed no sign of backing down, instead issuing a statement earlier Wednesday accusing the Congolese military of rounding up citizens of Tutsi descent in preparation of an “imminent genocide.”

    Spokesman Lawrence Kanyuka claimed Congolese citizens of Tutsi origin were being asked to gather in certain places or risk being treated as rebels. Kanyuka offered no evidence backing up his claim.

    “The M23 reiterate its undertaken commitment to a direct dialogue with the DRC Government in order to peacefully resolve the ongoing conflict,” he said. “However, it shall not stand by and witness the slaughtering of a group of Congolese citizens.”

    There was no immediate comment from the Congolese military on the M23 allegations but a Congolese government spokesman again voiced opposition to the rebels joining peace talks. “Rwanda is the spokesperson for the M23,” Patrick Muyaya said, a claim Rwanda denies.

    Congo’s President Felix Tshisekedi also has met recently with representatives of the Tutsi and Hutu ethnic groups, where he condemned xenophobia and reassured them of his commitment to condemning ethnic discrimination.

    The M23 rose to prominence a decade ago when its fighters seized Goma, the largest city in Congo’s east, which sits along the border with Rwanda. After a peace deal, many of M23′s fighters were integrated into the national military.

    Then the group re-emerged last November, saying the government had failed to live up to its decade-long promises. By June, M23 had seized the strategic town of Bunagana near the border with Uganda.

    M23 has been a sticking point in deteriorating relations between Congo and Rwanda. Many of the rebel fighters are Congolese ethnic Tutsis and Rwanda’s president is of Rwandan Tutsi descent.

    In August, a report by U.N. experts said they had “solid evidence” that members of Rwanda’s armed forces were conducting operations in eastern Congo in support of the M23 rebel group.

    Rwanda, though, has repeatedly denied the allegations and has accused Congolese forces of carrying out cross-border shelling.

    The summit Wednesday also included the presidents of Angola and Burundi, and former Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who has been mediating peace efforts in eastern Congo in recent weeks.

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  • Man killed by Indiana police after suspected of killing 2

    Man killed by Indiana police after suspected of killing 2

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    ANGOLA, Ind. — A man suspected of killing two people early Sunday in northern Indiana was fatally shot during a shootout with police, authorities said.

    The encounter between the man and local and state officers occurred around 5:30 a.m. in Angola, a town of about 9,000 people near Indiana’s borders with Michigan and Ohio. It was nearly five hours after police discovered the bodies of two men outside a local home, Indiana State Police said.

    The man exchanged gunfire with police, then fled on foot. During another exchange, he was struck at least once and killed, state police said.

    The man “matched the description of the person suspected of shooting the two males” about 1 a.m., state police said.

    No names were released.

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