Tunisia: Rampant violations against refugees and migrants expose European Union’s (EU) complicity risk

Source: APO


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The Tunisian authorities have over the past three years increasingly dismantled protections for refugees, asylum seekers and migrants, particularly Black people, with a dangerous shift towards racist policing and widespread human rights violations that endanger their lives, safety and dignity, Amnesty International said today. The European Union risks complicity by maintaining cooperation on migration control without effective human rights safeguards.

In a new report, ‘Nobody Hears You When You Scream’: Dangerous Shift in Tunisia’s Migration Policy, Amnesty International has documented how, fuelled by racist rhetoric from officials, Tunisian authorities have carried out racially targeted arrests and detentions; reckless interceptions at sea; collective expulsions of tens of thousands of refugees and migrants to Algeria and Libya; and subjected refugees and migrants to torture and other ill-treatment, including rape and other sexual violence, while cracking down on civil society providing critical assistance.  

In June 2024, Tunisian authorities ordered an end to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) role in processing asylum claims, removing the only avenue for seeking asylum in the country. Yet EU cooperation with Tunisia on migration control has continued without effective human rights safeguards, risking EU complicity in serious violations and trapping more people where their lives and rights are at risk.

“The Tunisian authorities have presided over horrific human rights violations, stoking xenophobia, while dealing blow after blow to refugee protection. They must immediately reverse this devastating rollback by ending racist incitement and stopping collective expulsions that threaten lives. They must protect the right to asylum and ensure that they don’t expel anyone to places where they would be at risk of serious human rights violations. NGO staff and human rights defenders detained for assisting refugees and migrants must be released unconditionally,” said Heba Morayef, Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty International.

“The EU must urgently suspend any migration and border control assistance aimed at containing people in Tunisia and halt funding to security forces or other entities responsible for human rights violations against refugees and migrants. Instead of prioritizing containment and fuelling violations, EU cooperation with Tunisia must shift its focus to ensuring adequate protection measures and asylum procedures are available in the country, and incorporate clear, enforceable human rights benchmarks and conditions, to avoid complicity in violations.”

Amnesty International conducted research between February 2023 and June 2023 and interviewed 120 refugees and migrants from nearly 20 countries (92 men, 28 women, eight children aged 16–17) in Tunis, Sfax, and Zarzis. The organization also reviewed UN, media, and civil society sources and the official pages of local Tunisian authorities. Ahead of publication, Amnesty shared its findings with Tunisian, European, and Libyan authorities. No response had been received by the time of publication.

A crisis fuelled by racist rhetoric

Testimonies reveal a migration and asylum system designed to exclude and punish rather than protect. At least 60 of those interviewed by Amnesty, including three children, two refugees and five asylum seekers, were arbitrarily arrested and detained. Black refugees and migrants were targeted amid systemic racial profiling and successive waves of racist violence from individuals and security forces, triggered by the public advocacy of racial hatred, starting with President Kais Saied’s remarks in February 2023 and echoed by other officials and parliamentarians since.

The situation was aggravated by a surge of repressive measures targeting at least six NGOs providing critical support to refugees and migrants. This has had horrific humanitarian consequences and led to an enormous gap in protection. Since May 2024, authorities have arbitrarily detained at least eight NGO workers and two former local officials who cooperated with them. The next hearing in the trial of the staff of one of these organizations, the Tunisian Council for Refugees, is scheduled for 24 November.

‘We saw them drown’

Amnesty International investigated 24 interceptions at sea and spoke to 25 refugees and migrants who described life-threatening, reckless and violent behaviour by the Tunisian coastguard, such as dangerous ramming; high-speed manoeuvres threatening to capsize boats; hitting people and boats with batons; firing tear gas at close range; and the denial of any individualised protection assessment at disembarkation.

“Céline”, a Cameroonian woman migrant intercepted after departing from the eastern region of Sfax in June 2023, told Amnesty International:

“They kept hitting our [wooden] boat with long batons with sharp endings, they pierced it… There were at least two women and three babies without life vests. We saw them drown and then we could not see the bodies anymore. I have never been so scared.”

Despite ongoing concerns about the lack of transparent reporting regarding interceptions, in 2024 the Tunisian authorities stopped publicly sharing data on these operations after establishing a maritime search and rescue region (SRR) supported by the EU. Prior to that, they had reported a significant increase in interceptions. 

‘Go to Libya, they will kill you’

From June 2023 onwards, Tunisian authorities started to collectively expel tens of thousands of refugees and migrants, mostly Black people, either following racially motivated arrests or following interceptions at sea. Amnesty International found that between June 2023 and May 2025, authorities carried out at least 70 collective expulsions, involving more than 11,500 people.

Tunisian security forces have been routinely dumping migrants, asylum seekers and refugees, including pregnant women and children, in remote and desert areas at the country’s borders with Libya and Algeria. They abandoned them without food or water and usually after confiscating their phones, identification documents and money, placing them at great risk to their lives and safety. Following the first wave of expulsions in June-July 2023, at least 28 migrants were found dead along the Libyan-Tunisian border and 80 migrants were reported missing.

These expulsions have been carried out without any procedural safeguards and in violation of the principle of non-refoulement.

While people pushed toward Algeria had to walk back from the border over weeks or faced risks of “chain refoulement” from Algeria to Niger, those sent toward Libya were often handed to the Libyan Border Guards or other militias who left them stranded or detained them in abusive facilities. Refugees and migrants in Libya are subjected to widespread and systematic human rights violations and abuses, carried out with impunity, that a UN fact-finding mission has found amount to a crime against humanity.  

“Ezra”, an Ivorian man, told Amnesty International how Tunisian security forces expelled him to the Libyan border, overnight on 1-2 July 2023 from Sfax, with a group of 24 people, including at least one child.

“We reached the Libyan border zone at around 6am… One [Tunisian] officer said, ‘Go to Libya, they will kill you.’ Another officer said, ‘Either you swim, or you run to Libya.’ They gave us a bag filled with our smashed phones….”

The group attempted to walk up the coastline back to Tunisia, but Tunisian men in military uniforms intercepted them, pursued them with dogs, beat four of them and brought them back to the border.

Tunisian security forces subjected 41 men, women and children to torture and other ill-treatment during interceptions, expulsions or in detention.

“Hakim”, a Cameroonian national, described how officers drove and abandoned him and others at the Algerian border in January 2025:

“They took each of us one by one, surrounded us, they asked us to lay down, we were handcuffed… They beat us with everything they had: clubs, batons, iron pipes, wooden sticks… They made us chant ‘Tunisia no more, we will never come back’, again and again. They punched us and kicked us, everywhere on our body.”

Amnesty International also documented 14 incidents of rape or other forms of sexual violence by Tunisian security forces, some of which took place in the context of abusive pat or strip-searches conducted in a humiliating manner likely amounting to torture.

“Karine”, a Cameroonian woman, told Amnesty International that male National Guard officers raped her twice on 26 May 2025, first during an abusive strip search after an interception in the region of Sfax, then at the Algerian border after a collective expulsion.

EU reckless support at the expense of lives and dignity

Failing to learn from the devastating results of its cooperation with Libya, the ongoing EU-Tunisia cooperation on migration control has pursued and resulted in the containment of people in a country where they are exposed to widespread human rights violations. Such cooperation involves funding the Tunisian coastguard’s search-and-rescue capacities and providing training and equipment for border management to reduce irregular crossings to Europe.

The EU signed its Memorandum of Understanding with Tunisia in July 2023, developed without effective human rights safeguards, such as a transparent prior human rights impact assessment, independent human rights monitoring with clear procedures to follow up on allegations of violations, and an explicit suspensive clause allowing for the agreement to be suspended in case of violations. The European Ombudsman noted these shortcomings in an inquiry in 2024. This cooperation remains ongoing more than two years later, despite alarming and well-documented reports of violations. Yet, while prioritizing migration control at the expense of international law, it has been touted by European officials as a success, citing a significant reduction in irregular sea arrivals of people from Tunisia since 2024.

“The silence of the EU and its member states over these horrific abuses is particularly alarming. Each day the EU persists in recklessly supporting Tunisia’s dangerous assault on the rights of migrants and refugees and those defending them, while failing to meaningfully review its migration cooperation, European leaders risk becoming complicit,” said Heba Morayef.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Amnesty International.

Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC): Number of children facing severe hunger set to surge by 20% as conflict drives thousands from their homes

Source: APO


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The number of children facing emergency levels of hunger in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is expected to surge by at least 20% by the new year due to ongoing violence, displacement and seasonal food shortages,  according to Save the Children.[1] 

Analysis of new data from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) Partnership—the leading international authority on the severity of hunger crises—found that about 14 million children— one in five – will face crisis levels of hunger or worse between January and June next year. 

Among them, around 2.1 million will face more severe emergency levels of hunger, characterised by acute malnutrition and a heightened risk of hunger-related death. [2] 

Three-quarters of the 2.1 million children facing emergency hunger across the country live in the eastern provinces of Ituri, North Kivu, South Kivu and Tanganyika where various conflicts, as well as attacks by different armed groups against civilians, dramatically escalated earlier this year. 

This led to a surge in hunger, displacement, civilian casualties and cases of sexual violence. More than two million people have been displaced by violence in DRC this year.  [3] 

Food insecurity has devastating effects on children’s health, leading to malnutrition, stunted growth, weakened immune systems, and increased vulnerability to diseases.  Children who do not have sufficient access to food will also struggle to focus and learn, if they have access to education.  

Greg Ramm, country director for Save the Children in DRC, said:  

“After a catastrophic escalation of hunger among children in DRC earlier this year, the latest findings by the IPC show that the situation has failed to improve as 14 million children in the country continue to face crisis levels of hunger, including 2 million children facing a hunger emergency. The ongoing violence in eastern DRC has left families without access to food, healthcare, and other essential services and made the DRC one of the world’s biggest displacement crises. The situation for families returning home is scarcely better. Poverty rates remain high, particularly in rural areas, trapping millions of people in repeated cycles of hunger. 

“The international community must take immediate action to address this crisis and prevent further suffering especially among children. We urgently need more funding to support lifesaving food security and nutrition programmes, so families have enough to eat and children don’t suffer from malnutrition.” 

Save the Children started working in eastern DRC in 1994, and is currently working with 13 local partners, as well as international partners and government authorities, to deliver critical health, nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene, child protection and education support to children and their families.    


NOTES  

[1]https://www.ipcinfo.org/fileadmin/user_upload/ipcinfo/docs/IPC_DRC_Acute_Food_Insecurity_Sep2025_Jun2026_snapshot_English.pdf 

Child shares estimated using population data from the UN World Population Prospects 2024.  

[2] The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) provides a common scale for classifying the severity and magnitude of food shortage and acute malnutrition.  

[3] OCHA update published 25 September shows 2.14 million people displaced in 2025 and 474,000 in the last 3 months  https://www.unocha.org/publications/report/democratic-republic-congo/republique-democratique-du-congo-personnes-deplacees-internes-et-retournees-aout-2025

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Save the Children.

State visit of the President of India to Angola and Botswana (November 08 – 13, 2025)

Source: APO


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Hon’ble President of India, Smt. Droupadi Murmu, will be paying State visit to Angola and Botswana from November 8-13, 2025. This will be the first ever State visit by an Indian Head of State to Angola and Botswana.

2. President Murmu will be visiting Angola from 8-11 November, 2025 at the invitation of His Excellency Mr. João Manuel Gonçalves Lourenço, President of the Republic of Angola. India and Angola are celebrating the 40th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations this year. President Murmu will be holding bilateral talks with President Lourenço on 9 November. President Murmu will be attending the 50th anniversary celebrations of Angola’s independence on November 11, 2025. President Murmu is scheduled to address the Angolan Parliament, and will be interacting with the Indian community in Angola. India and Angola enjoy close ties of friendship and cooperation, which have been growing across sectors. The State visit of President Murmu will provide an opportunity to review entire gamut of bilateral ties and to provide further momentum to mutually beneficial cooperation.

3. On the second leg of her visit, President Murmu will be visiting the Republic of Botswana from 11-13 November 2025 at the invitation of the President of Botswana, His Excellency Adv. Duma Gideon Boko. The State visit underscores India’s commitment to strengthen its long-standing and friendly ties with Botswana. During the visit, President Murmu will hold bilateral talks with the President of Botswana on 12 November. President Murmu is scheduled to address the National Assembly of Botswana, interact with the members of the Indian community in Botswana, and visit sites of cultural and historical importance.The visit will provide fresh momentum to collaborative ties with Botswana and strengthen cooperation in new areas for mutual benefit.

4. The State visit of President Murmu is reflective of India’s firm commitment to deepen its partnership with the African region, and will further strengthen India’s long-standing cooperative ties with Angola and Botswana.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of External Affairs – Government of India.

Seychelles Participates in the Second World Summit for Social Development in Doha, Qatar

Source: APO


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Ambassador Gervais Moumou, Resident Ambassador of the Republic of Seychelles to the United Arab Emirates, represented the Republic of Seychelles at the Second World Summit for Social Development, held in Doha, Qatar, from 4 to 6 November 2025.

The Summit, which brought together over 14,000 participants from governments, international and regional organizations, civil society, academia, and the private sector, served as a key platform to advance inclusive social development and reaffirm the shared global commitment to leaving no one behind.

In his intervention, Ambassador Moumou noted that, despite its small size and limited resources, Seychelles has built a social model grounded in equity, solidarity, and inclusion. He highlighted that Seychelles continues to lead the African continent with a Human Development Index of 0.848, maintaining social cohesion through a careful balance between economic realities and social aspirations.

Ambassador Moumou equally stressed the need to keep climate action central to global development, calling for practical measures to strengthen resilience, including the operationalisation of the Multidimensional Vulnerability Index (MVI).

Reaffirming Seychelles’ commitment to the Antigua and Barbuda Agenda for SIDS – ABAS Agreement, he highlighted that the vulnerabilities of Small Island Developing States (SIDS) must remain a global priority and expressed confidence in the international community’s leadership in implementing the MVI for sustainable and equitable development.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Tourism, Republic of Seychelles.

Qatar: Minister of State for International Cooperation Meets Rwanda’s Minister of Local Government

Source: APO


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HE Minister of State for International Cooperation Dr. Maryam bint Ali bin Nasser Al Misnad met on Thursday with HE Minister of Local Government of the Republic of Rwanda Dominique Habimana, on the sidelines of the Second World Summit for Social Development, held in Doha.

The meeting discussed cooperation relations between the two countries and ways to support and strengthen them, in addition to a number of topics of common interest.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Foreign Affairs of The State of Qatar.

Eritrea: Funeral Service of Veteran Fighter Fesehaye Haile

Source: APO


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The funeral service of veteran freedom fighter Fesehaye Haile (Afro), Governor of the Central Region, was held at Asmara Martyrs Cemetery today at 10:00 a.m. in the presence of President Isaias Afwerki, Ministers, senior government and PFDJ officials, Army Commanders, family members, and a large number of nationals.

Veteran freedom fighter Fesehaye Haile, who passed away on 4 November at the age of 78 due to illness, was one of the heroes produced by Eritrea’s struggle for independence. He devoted 52 years of his life to achieving national independence, safeguarding national sovereignty, and contributing to the nation-building process.

He joined the Eritrean People’s Liberation Forces in July 1973 after serving as a member of the “Tihisha” agitational group from 1972 to 1973.

During the armed struggle for independence, he served his nation and people with utmost dedication in various capacities, including as a combatant in the Eritrean People’s Liberation Army, and in the EPLF Departments of People’s Administration and Intelligence and Security.

After independence, veteran freedom fighter Fesehaye continued to serve his country as Deputy Governor of Asmara; Executive Director of the Northern Red Sea Region; Director General of the Customs Department at the Ministry of Finance; Director General of Civil Aviation; and Governor of the Gash-Barka and Central Regions, respectively.

President Isaias Afwerki laid a wreath on the tomb of veteran fighter Fesehaye Haile; Mr. Yemane Gebreab on behalf of the PFDJ; Ambassador Abdella Musa, Governor of the Anseba Region, on behalf of the Ministry of Local Government; Mr. Zerit Tewoldebrhan on behalf of the Central Region; and Mr. Gideon Fesehaye, son of the veteran fighter.

Veteran freedom fighter Fesehaye is survived by his wife and three children.

Expressing deep sorrow over the passing away of veteran freedom fighter Fesehaye Haile, the Ministry of Local Government conveys condolences to families and friends.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Information, Eritrea.

Eritrea: Various Activities by Diaspora Nationals

Source: APO


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Eritrean communities in Sweden and the United Arab Emirates conducted various activities focusing on raising awareness, strengthening organization, enhancing contributions to national development programs, and promoting the true image of Eritrea and its people.

Accordingly, Eritrean communities in all cities of Sweden celebrated the founding of the Eritrean Community Day in Sweden, featuring programs depicting the culture and identity of Eritrea’s ethnic groups, the history of the people’s struggle, as well as resilience and unity.

Mr. Biniam Misgina, Chairman of the Eritrean Community in Sweden, said that the program—which included traditional cuisine and exhibitions of cultural artifacts—was organized in central markets and other locations frequented by large numbers of people.

Likewise, the Swedish branch of the National Association of Eritrean War Disabled Veterans conducted seminars in the Swedish cities of Stockholm, Uppsala, Gothenburg, Örebro, Umeå, Sandviken, and Katrineholm.

The seminars, led by Mr. Abraham Kifletsion, Vice Chairman of the National Association; Mr. Seium Woldemariam, member of the Central Committee of the National Association; and Mr. Tekeste Fesehaye, Chairman of the Swedish Branch, were aimed at enhancing awareness and strengthening participation and contribution of members in national development programs.

In the same vein, a seminar was organized for nationals in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, focusing on the prevailing situation in the homeland and regional developments.

At the seminar, Mr. Mohammed Selim, Managing Director at the Eritrean Consulate General in the United Arab Emirates, and Mr. Tesfu Gebretensae, Head of Public and Community Affairs, delivered extensive briefings and responded to questions raised by participants.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Information, Eritrea.

Le ministre du pétrole et de l’énergie de la Gambie sera le chef de file des discussions sur le projet MSGBC 2025

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French


Nani Juwara, ministre du pétrole et de l’énergie de la Gambie, interviendra lors de la conférence et de l’exposition MSGBC Oil, Gas & Power 2025, qui se tiendra du 8 au 10 décembre à Dakar, au Sénégal. La conférence et l’exposition annuelles rassemblent des dirigeants gouvernementaux, des compagnies pétrolières nationales et des investisseurs privés de Mauritanie, du Sénégal, de Gambie, de Guinée-Bissau et de Guinée-Conakry pour explorer de nouveaux partenariats et de nouvelles opportunités dans le paysage énergétique en évolution de la région.

Le ministre Juwara devrait mettre l’accent sur les récents développements qui ont façonné les secteurs énergétiques de la Gambie, notamment la stratégie du pays visant à attirer de nouveaux investissements en amont, les réformes en cours dans le secteur de l’électricité et les partenariats visant à accélérer le développement des ressources renouvelables. Sa participation fait suite à une série d’initiatives positionnant la Gambie comme une destination d’exploration compétitive et un centre énergétique émergent dans le bassin MSGBC.

En octobre 2025, la Gambie a renforcé ses partenariats internationaux en signant un protocole d’accord avec la Turquie visant à couvrir la coopération en matière d’énergie renouvelable et d’investissement dans les infrastructures. L’accord couvre des projets conjoints de centrales solaires, éoliennes et hydroélectriques, de production, de transmission et de distribution d’énergie, ainsi que des investissements dans les secteurs public et privé. 

Ce partenariat énergétique avec la Turquie s’inscrit dans le cadre des efforts déployés par la Gambie pour accroître sa capacité de production et atteindre un taux d’accès à l’électricité de 90 % d’ici à décembre 2025. En outre, une centrale solaire photovoltaïque de 23 MW avec une batterie de stockage de 8 MWh, mise en service à Jambur en 2024, a marqué une étape importante dans la diversification du bouquet énergétique national. Soutenue par la Banque mondiale et la Banque européenne d’investissement, cette installation a permis d’augmenter la capacité de production tout en réduisant la dépendance au diesel. 

Parallèlement à la croissance des énergies renouvelables, le potentiel en amont de la Gambie peut susciter l’intérêt des investisseurs. Avec plus de huit blocs offshore et deux blocs onshore actuellement ouverts à l’investissement, le pays représente l’une des frontières d’exploration les plus prometteuses d’Afrique de l’Ouest. Couvrant 2 682 km², les blocs A5 et A2 contiennent à eux seuls des réserves estimées à un milliard de barils de pétrole. Environ 80 % des données offshore et 5 % des données onshore ont déjà été acquises, ce qui réduit considérablement les risques liés à l’exploration et permet aux investisseurs d’entrer plus rapidement sur le marché. En outre, le ministère du pétrole et de l’énergie travaille actuellement à l’élaboration d’un nouveau projet de loi sur l’exploration, le développement et la production de pétrole, afin d’améliorer la transparence dans l’octroi des licences et de rationaliser les processus d’approbation.

“La Gambie est prête pour les investissements, grâce à un meilleur accès aux données, à une réglementation transparente et à un engagement fort en faveur de la coopération régionale dans le domaine de l’énergie”, a déclaré Sandra Jeque, directrice des événements et des projets pour Energy Capital & Power. “Lors du MSGBC 2025, le ministre Juwara devrait discuter de la double stratégie énergétique de la Gambie, qui consiste à faire progresser l’exploration pétrolière et gazière tout en augmentant la capacité des énergies renouvelables”, a ajouté Mme Jeque.

Distribué par APO Group pour Energy Capital & Power.

L’Organisation des producteurs africains de pétrole (APPO) nomme Farid Ghezali au poste de secrétaire général et trace une nouvelle voie pour les producteurs de pétrole africains

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French


L’Organisation des producteurs africains de pétrole (APPO) a nommé l’Algérien Farid Ghezali au poste de secrétaire général lors de la réunion du Conseil ministériel qui s’est tenue cette semaine en République du Congo. M. Ghezali prendra ses fonctions en janvier 2026, marquant ainsi le début d’un nouveau chapitre pour les producteurs de pétrole du continent, alors que l’Afrique positionne son industrie pétrolière au centre d’un avenir énergétique juste, inclusif et durable.

La Chambre africaine de l’énergie (AEC), porte-parole du secteur énergétique africain, adresse ses félicitations à M. Ghezali pour sa nomination au poste de secrétaire général. Fort de plusieurs décennies d’expérience dans le secteur amont du pétrole et du gaz en Afrique, M. Ghezali est prêt à mener l’organisation vers une nouvelle ère de collaboration et de croissance. L’AEC exprime également sa gratitude au secrétaire général sortant, le Dr Omar Farouk Ibrahim, dont le leadership exceptionnel et l’engagement sans faille ont renforcé le rôle de l’APPO en tant que porte-parole des producteurs de pétrole africains. Sous la direction du Dr Ibrahim, l’APPO a renforcé ses partenariats avec les gouvernements et les investisseurs, fait progresser la localisation de la chaîne de valeur énergétique africaine et réaffirmé le rôle du pétrole et du gaz dans le développement de l’Afrique. Son plaidoyer inlassable en faveur de l’indépendance énergétique africaine et de la coopération intra-africaine a laissé un héritage durable.

M. Ghezali prend ses fonctions à un moment où le secteur pétrolier et gazier africain est sur le point de connaître une croissance accélérée. Les découvertes pétrolières qui ouvrent de nouvelles perspectives sur des marchés tels que la Namibie et la Côte d’Ivoire, associées à de nouvelles campagnes d’exploration dans des provinces établies telles que l’Angola, le Nigeria et la Libye, annoncent de nouvelles opportunités pour renforcer la production. Les progrès réalisés dans l’acquisition sismique, les technologies de traitement et les capacités de forage en eaux profondes ont encore renforcé les efforts d’exploration, ouvrant la voie à de futures découvertes. Grâce à ces projets, la production africaine d’hydrocarbures devrait atteindre 13,6 millions de barils équivalent pétrole par jour (MMboe/j) d’ici 2030, soit une augmentation notable par rapport à 2026, où elle est estimée à 11,4 MMboe/j. Malgré cette croissance, des investissements beaucoup plus importants sont nécessaires pour libérer tout le potentiel de l’industrie pétrolière africaine.

Alors que le continent entre dans une nouvelle ère de développement pétrolier, l’APPO continuera à jouer un rôle central dans la promotion de l’agenda énergétique de l’Afrique sur la scène mondiale. Alors que les décideurs politiques mondiaux appellent à la fin de l’exploration et de la production pétrolières, l’Afrique maintient son droit à développer ses ressources pour le développement de ses économies. Dans ce scénario, l’APPO joue un rôle important, servant de pont entre les producteurs africains et leurs homologues mondiaux. L’organisation défend depuis longtemps la position de l’Afrique, qui est axée sur le développement responsable des ressources et une approche inclusive de la transition énergétique. Sous la direction de M. Ghezali, l’APPO est bien placée pour poursuivre cette dynamique et soutenir le continent alors qu’il entre dans sa prochaine phase de développement énergétique.

La création de la Banque africaine de l’énergie (AEB) est l’un des piliers de la stratégie de développement de l’APPO. Dirigée par l’APPO en collaboration avec l’institution financière multilatérale African Export-Import Bank, l’AEB, dotée d’un budget de 5 milliards de dollars, offre une solution pratique aux défis financiers du continent, en permettant aux projets africains d’accéder à des capitaux et de faire avancer les développements. Sous la direction de M. Ghezali, l’APPO est chargée de mettre en place cette importante institution, afin de soutenir la croissance continue de l’industrie pétrolière africaine.

« La nomination de Farid Ghezali intervient à un moment décisif pour les producteurs de pétrole africains. Sa connaissance approfondie du secteur et son leadership éprouvé renforceront la mission de l’APPO, qui consiste à promouvoir la sécurité énergétique, la création de valeur locale et la collaboration régionale. L’AEC se réjouit de travailler en étroite collaboration avec lui afin de garantir que le pétrole reste un catalyseur de l’industrialisation et de la prospérité sur tout notre continent », déclare NJ Ayuk, président exécutif de l’AEC.

Alors que le continent accélère le rythme du développement pétrolier, la coordination de l’APPO sous la direction de M. Ghezali sera essentielle pour harmoniser les politiques de potentiel local, optimiser la gestion des ressources et garantir que l’Afrique tire une plus grande valeur de ses richesses en hydrocarbures. L’AEC est prête à collaborer avec l’APPO et ses États membres pour faire progresser ces objectifs communs, en transformant les vastes ressources pétrolières de l’Afrique en un fondement pour une croissance inclusive et durable.

Distribué par APO Group pour African Energy Chamber.

The Gambia’s Petroleum and Energy Minister to Headline MSGBC 2025 Discussions

Source: APO – Report:

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Nani Juwara, Minister of Petroleum and Energy of The Gambia, will speak at the MSGBC Oil, Gas & Power 2025 Conference and Exhibition, taking place on December 8-10 in Dakar, Senegal. The annual conference and exhibition gathers government leaders, national oil companies and private investors from across Mauritania, Senegal, The Gambia, Guinea-Bissau and Guinea-Conakry to explore new partnerships and opportunities in the region’s evolving energy landscape.

Minister Juwara is expected to highlight recent developments shaping The Gambia’s energy sectors, including the country’s strategy to attract new upstream investment, ongoing reforms in the power industry and partnerships to accelerate the development of renewable resources. His participation follows a series of initiatives positioning The Gambia as a competitive exploration destination and an emerging energy hub in the MSGBC Basin.

In October 2025, The Gambia strengthened its international partnerships through the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding with Turkey aimed at covering cooperation in renewable energy and infrastructure investment. The agreement covers joint projects in solar, wind and hydroelectric power plants; energy generation, transmission and distribution; as well as public‑ and private‑sector investment.

This energy partnership with Turkey is part of The Gambia’s efforts to expand generation capacity and achieve 90% electricity access by December 2025. Additionally, a 23 MW solar photovoltaic plant with 8 MWh battery storage commissioned in Jambur in 2024 marked a milestone in diversifying the national energy mix. Backed by the World Bank and European Investment Bank, the facility has expanded generation capacity while reducing diesel reliance.

Alongside renewable energy growth, The Gambia’s upstream potential can attract investor interest. With over eight offshore and two onshore blocks currently open for investment, the country represents one of West Africa’s most promising exploration frontiers. Covering 2,682 km², blocks A5 and A2 alone contain estimated reserves of one billion barrels of oil. Approximately 80% of offshore and 5% of onshore data coverage have already been acquired, significantly de-risking exploration and enabling faster entry timelines for investors. Additionally, the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy is currently working on a new petroleum exploration, development and production bill to enhance transparency in licensing and streamline approval processes.

“The Gambia is ready for investment, supported by improved data access, transparent regulation and a strong commitment to regional energy cooperation,” said Sandra Jeque, Events and Project Director, Energy Capital & Power. “At MSGBC 2025, Minister Juwara is expected to discuss The Gambia’s dual-track energy strategy– advancing oil and gas exploration while expanding renewable capacity,” Jeque added.

– on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.