

Foreign
Israeli drone strikes UN vehicle during exchange with Hezbollah, four injured – report
The IDF denied hitting a vehicle carrying United Nations observers outside the southern Lebanese border town of Rmeish.
Lebanese terror organization Hezbollah claimed to have struck Israel’s Ramim ridge, near the Lebanese border, on Saturday morning after Lebanese media reported that the IDF carried out three strikes in the southern village of Taybeh.
Local residents reported that a rocket fell in the northern border town of Margaliot later on Saturday, with no siren sounding prior. According to Walla, the locals observed a “louder explosion than usual.”
Lebanon’s National News Agency further reported that Israeli drones were observed flying over the Iqlim al-Tuffah and Nabatieh regions.
What is Outbrain
Israeli strike hits car carrying UN observers near south Lebanon border, security sources say
One Israeli drone strike reportedly hit a vehicle carrying United Nations observers outside the southern Lebanese border town of Rmeish, two security sources told Reuters.
According to Lebanese reports, four people were injured in the strike.
Four United Nations observers were wounded on Saturday when a shell exploded near them as they were carrying out a foot patrol in southern Lebanon, the UN peacekeeping mission said, adding it was still investigating the origin of the blast.
The UNIFIL statement said the targeting of peacekeepers is “unacceptable.” Two security sources had told Reuters the observers were wounded in an Israeli strike but the Israeli military denied striking in the area.
One of the security sources said the car carried three UN technical observers and one Lebanese translator. That source, and a second security source, said that the Israeli strike had left several of those in the car wounded.
Various responses to the incident
There was no immediate comment from the UN peacekeeper mission in southern Lebanon UNIFIL, which accompanies technical observers monitoring the Blue Line, which delineates the border between Lebanon and Israel.
Israel did not carry out an airstrike on a vehicle carrying United Nations observers in southern Lebanon on Saturday, the IDF said.
“Contrary to the reports, the IDF did not strike a UNIFIL vehicle in the area of Rmeish this morning,” the IDF said.
Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati condemned the ‘targeting’ of UN forces in southern Lebanon that wounded three observers.
Foreign
Finnish Court approves Simon Akpa’s extradition, to face terrorism charges in Nigeria

In quest for transnational justice and regional stability, the Finnish Court has approved Nigeria’s request for the extradition of the self acclaimed Prime Minister of Biafra, Simon Ekpa.
The extradition approval followef Nigeria’s request which some vital documents accompanied the request sometime January.
Simon Ekpa is a Finnish-Nigerian separatist leader, to Nigeria. The Päijät-Häme District Court in Lahti ruled on April 18 that Ekpa will be handed over to Nigerian authorities on July 15, 2025.
Ekpa, who refers to himself as the “Prime Minister” of the self-proclaimed Biafra Republic Government-in-Exile, has gained notoriety for promoting violent separatist rhetoric from abroad.
He is alleged to be the leader of a self-styled group called “Autopilot” and is linked to the Biafra Liberation Army (BLA), which authorities have accused of orchestrating kidnappings, assassinations, and violent enforcement of “sit-at-home” orders in southeastern Nigeria.
Contrary to repeated claims in Nigerian media and some government narratives, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has distanced itself from Ekpa, insisting he has no affiliation with their organization. IPOB maintains it remains a non-violent group with no factions.
“We don’t understand why the Nigerian government and media continue to tag him as a leader of a faction of IPOB. That is pure misinformation,” said an IPOB spokesperson.
“Simon Ekpa runs his own network of criminals and kidnappers, and his actions do not represent our struggle.”
Ekpa was arrested in November 2024 in the city of Lahti following a months-long investigation by Finnish authorities. He is accused of using social media platforms to incite violence in Nigeria from abroad—calls that allegedly led to attacks on civilians and security forces.
Four others were arrested alongside him on suspicions of funding and supporting his activities.
Nigeria has pursued Ekpa’s extradition since early 2023. The decision to grant the request is seen as a major diplomatic victory for the Nigerian government. A senior official from Nigeria’s Ministry of Defence described the court’s ruling as “a triumph for justice and a stern warning to those who seek to destabilize Nigeria from overseas.”
Finnish courts rarely authorize extraditions outside the European Union or Nordic countries. However, in this case, Finnish prosecutors said Nigeria presented compelling evidence under the Rome Statute—ratified by both countries—leading to an exceptional agreement.
Ekpa is expected to face multiple charges upon his return to Nigeria, including terrorism, conspiracy, incitement to violence, and crimes against the state. His trial is anticipated to draw intense scrutiny from both local and international observers, with several human rights organizations expected to monitor proceedings closely.
The extradition marks a crucial moment in Nigeria’s effort to clamp down on violent separatist agitation and signals a new era of international cooperation in tackling cross-border extremism.
Foreign
Who will be the next Pope? Key candidates in an unpredictable contest

Who will be the next pope? The decision could have a profound impact on the Catholic Church and the world’s 1.4 billion baptised Roman Catholics.
It also promises to be a highly unpredictable and open process for a host of reasons.
The College of Cardinals will meet in conclave in the Sistine Chapel to debate and then vote for their preferred candidates until a single name prevails.
With 80% of the cardinals appointed by Pope Francis himself, they are not only electing a pope for the first time, but will offer a broad global perspective.
For the first time in history, fewer than half of those given a vote will be European.
And although the college may be dominated by his appointments, they were not exclusively “progressive” or “traditionalist”.
For those reasons, it is harder than ever to predict who will be elected the next Pope.
Could the cardinals elect an African or an Asian Pope, or might they favour one of the old hands of the Vatican administration?
Here is a selection of names being mentioned as Francis’s potential successor, and we expect more to emerge in the coming days.
Softly spoken Italian Cardinal Parolin was the Vatican’s secretary of state under Pope Francis – making him the Pope’s chief adviser. The secretary of state also heads the Roman Curia, the Church’s central administration.
Having acted effectively as deputy pope, he could be considered a frontrunner.
He is viewed by some as more likely to prioritise diplomacy and a global outlook than the purity of Catholic dogma. His critics consider that a problem, while his supporters see a strength.
But he has been critical of the legalisation of same-sex marriage around the world, calling a landmark 2015 vote in favour in the Republic of Ireland “a defeat for humanity”.
The bookmakers may back him but Cardinal Parolin will be well aware of an old Italian saying that stresses the uncertainty of the pope-picking process: “He who enters a conclave as a pope, leaves it as a cardinal.”
Some 213 of the previous 266 popes have been Italian and even though there has not been an Italian pope in 40 years, the pivot of the upper echelons of the Church away from Italy and Europe may mean there may not be another for now.
Could the next pope come from Asia?
Cardinal Tagle has decades of pastoral experience – meaning he has been an active Church leader among the people as opposed to a diplomat for the Vatican or cloistered expert on Church law.
The Church is massively influential in the Philippines, where about 80% of the population is Catholic. The country currently has a record five members of the College of Cardinals – which could make for a significant lobbying faction if they all back Cardinal Tagle.
He is considered a moderate within the Catholic definition, and has been dubbed the “Asian Francis” because of a dedication to social issues and sympathy for migrants that he shared with the late pope.
He has opposed abortion rights, calling them “a form of murder” – a position in line with the Church’s broader stance that life begins at conception. He has also spoken against euthanasia.
But in 2015 when he was Archbishop of Manila, Cardinal Tagle called for the Church to reassess its “severe” stance towards gay people, divorcees and single mothers, saying past harshness had done lasting harm and left people feeling “branded”, and that each individual deserved compassion and respect.
The cardinal was considered a candidate to be pope as far back as the 2013 conclave in which Francis was elected.
Asked a decade ago how he viewed suggestions he could be next, he replied: “I treat it like a joke! It’s funny.”
It’s very possible the next Pope could be from Africa, where the Catholic Church continues to add millions of members. Cardinal Ambongo is a leading candidate, hailing from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
He has been Archbishop of Kinshasa for seven years, and was appointed cardinal by Pope Francis.
He is a cultural conservative, opposing blessings for same-sex marriage, stating that “unions of persons of the same sex are considered contradictory to cultural norms and intrinsically evil”.
Though Christianity is the majority religion in the DRC, Christians there have faced death and persecution at the hands of jihadist group Islamic State and associated rebels. Against that backdrop, Cardinal Ambongo is viewed as a fierce advocate for the Church.
But in a 2020 interview, he spoke in favour of religious plurality, saying: “Let Protestants be Protestants and Muslims be Muslims. We are going to work with them. But everyone has to keep their own identity.”
Such comments could lead some cardinals to wonder if he fully embraces their sense of mission – in which Catholics hope to spread the Church’s word throughout the world.
If chosen by his peers, the influential Cardinal Turkson would likewise have the distinction of being the first African pope for 1,500 years.
Like Cardinal Ambongo, he has claimed not to want the job. “I’m not sure whether anyone does aspire to become a Pope,” he told the BBC in 2013.
Asked if Africa had a good case to provide the next Pope based on the Church’s growth on the continent, he said he felt the Pope shouldn’t be chosen based on statistics, because “those types of considerations tend to muddy the waters”.
He was the first Ghanaian to be made a cardinal, back in 2003 under Pope John Paul II.
Like Cardinal Tagle, Cardinal Turkson was considered a potential Pope a decade later, when Francis was chosen. In fact, bookmakers made him the favourite ahead of voting.
A guitarist who once played in a funk band, Cardinal Turkson is known for his energetic presence.
Like many cardinals from Africa, he leans conservative. However, he has opposed the criminalisation of gay relationships in African countries including his native Ghana.
In a BBC interview in 2023, while Ghana’s parliament was discussing a bill imposing harsh penalties on LGBTQ+ people, Turkson said he felt homosexuality should not be treated as an offence.
Back in 2012, he was accused of making fear-mongering predictions over the spread of Islam in Europe at a Vatican conference of bishops, for which he later apologised.