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ICE Deputy Director Resigns

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Madison Sheahan, the deputy director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), has resigned from her position.

She stepped down to launch a bid for Congress in Ohio’s 9th District, Fox News reported on Thursday, January 15, citing multiple federal law enforcement sources.

The resignation, announced internally marks a sudden move by a key figure in the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement apparatus.

Sheahan, who has been a vocal advocate for strict border security and interior enforcement, is challenging long-serving Democratic incumbent Rep. Marcy Kaptur in a district that has seen mixed voting patterns in recent elections — with many counties favoring President Donald Trump in November 2024, despite Kaptur’s re-election.

“No Excuses. Let’s Get It Done,” reads the message on Sheahan’s campaign website.

She positioned herself as a defender of “American jobs, American paychecks, and American values,” stating:

“For too long, Northwest Ohio has been represented by a career politician who has grown comfortable with the swamp and disconnected from the people back home. I am running because President Trump deserves a Congress that stands firmly behind his agenda, and Ohio deserves an elected Representative that will make America safer, more affordable, and more prosperous.”

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem praised Sheahan’s leadership in a statement:

“I’ve known her for years, she loves her family, Ohio and her country. She will be a great defender of freedom when she goes to Congress. Madison Sheahan is a work horse, strong executor, and terrific leader who led the men and women of ICE to achieve the American people’s mandate to target, arrest, and deport criminal illegal aliens. We wish her all the best.”

Under Sheahan’s tenure as deputy director, ICE reportedly expanded significantly, growing from roughly 20,000 employees and a $10 billion budget to an $85 billion organization with more than 30,000 professionals. She is credited with overseeing the hiring of 12,000 new law enforcement officers within 180 days, aligning with the administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement goals.

Before joining ICE, Sheahan served as Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries under Governor Jeff Landry, managing a $280 million budget and leading over 800 employees. She previously held leadership roles under former South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem.

Kaptur’s campaign responded to the announcement by highlighting her long record of bipartisan service: “While Republicans from near and far will fight through a messy primary in this district they gerrymandered again just this fall, Congresswoman Kaptur is focused on delivering real results for her constituents. She’s working to lower costs for working families, protect access to affordable health care, and bring transformative investments to Northwest Ohio. Voters are tired of the self-dealing corruption and culture of lawlessness they’ve seen over the last year. They want a leader focused on affordability and real results, and Marcy Kaptur consistently works across the aisle to deliver both.”

Sheahan’s decision to leave ICE comes at a time of heightened focus on U.S. immigration policy, including recent visa pauses and enforcement actions affecting nationals from several African countries, including Ghana. Her congressional bid is expected to center on border security, economic protectionism, and support for President Trump’s agenda, potentially influencing U.S.-Ghana relations and diaspora discussions.

Global Update

US Tells Stranded Americans in Middle East: Don’t Rely on Government for Evacuation

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Washington / Accra – March 4, 2026 – Americans trapped in the Middle East amid the escalating US-Israel-Iran conflict have been left stunned after the State Department’s emergency hotline delivered a blunt automated message:

“Please do not rely on the US government for assisted departure or evacuation at this time.”

The recording, accessible by calling the 24/7 Overseas Citizens Services hotline (202-501-4444), continues:

“There are currently no United States evacuation points… Please continue to check the embassy’s website for updated information.” The warning directly contradicts earlier public guidance from Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who had urged stranded citizens to contact the hotline for assistance.

The message surfaced as the conflict—sparked by US-Israeli airstrikes on Iranian targets and Iran’s retaliatory missile barrages across the Gulf—entered its fifth day, grounding commercial flights, closing airspace in the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, and other states, and stranding thousands of travellers, including US citizens.

A day earlier, the State Department announced it was facilitating limited charter flights from several Gulf countries to help Americans leave. However, no large-scale government-led evacuation operation has been launched, prompting sharp criticism from lawmakers.

Democratic Representative Ted Lieu posted on X: “It was an absolute dereliction of duty that the Trump Administration didn’t have a plan in place to get Americans out of danger.”

Other critics accused the administration of poor planning and incompetence, especially given warnings of potential escalation in the days leading up to the strikes.

The State Department has not commented directly on the hotline message, but officials say they continue to monitor the situation closely and advise US citizens to register with the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) and follow embassy alerts.

The crisis has already caused widespread flight cancellations, with airlines including Emirates, Etihad, and Qatar Airways suspending most services. For Ghanaian and other African nationals in the region, similar evacuation challenges persist, with governments like Ghana coordinating limited repatriation efforts.

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Global Update

Latest on U.S.-Israel Attack on Iran: Death Toll Tops 1,045, Maersk Suspends Bookings, U.S. Sinks Iranian Warship

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Accra, Ghana – March 4, 2026 – The death toll from five days of US-Israeli airstrikes on Iran has surpassed 1,045, according to Iranian state media, while the conflict continues to draw in Gulf states and disrupt global shipping lanes.

Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian addressed neighbouring countries on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, insisting Tehran had “no choice” but to retaliate after US-Israeli attacks, and emphasized respect for sovereignty while calling for collective regional security efforts.

However, Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani told Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi that the strikes on Gulf states showed “no genuine desire for de-escalation” and an intent to drag neighbors into war. Qatar affirmed its right to self-defence and demanded an immediate halt to attacks on states that have remained outside the conflict.

Military developments escalated further on Wednesday:

– A ballistic missile launched from Iran was intercepted and destroyed by NATO air and missile defense systems in the eastern Mediterranean Sea (target unclear).

– A US submarine sank an Iranian warship with a torpedo in international waters off Sri Lanka’s coast, confirmed by US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

– Shipping giant Maersk announced it has temporarily suspended cargo bookings to and from the UAE, Oman (except Salalah), Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and parts of Saudi Arabia (Dammam and Jubail) until further notice, citing personnel safety, cargo protection, and network stability amid the volatile situation.

In the United States, Democratic lawmakers criticized President Donald Trump’s justifications for the strikes, warning that the country risks sliding into a ground assault and an “open-ended engagement with no end in sight.”

The conflict has already triggered airspace closures, flight cancellations, and evacuations across the Gulf, with African governments—including Ghana—activating emergency plans for citizens in the region.

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“Africa Speaks Powerfully, but Empty”: Nigerian Professional Exposes Continent’s Mobility Crisis

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As African leaders converged on the Ethiopian capital last week for the African Union summit to discuss unity, integration, and shared destiny, a Nigerian professional who was blocked from attending a parallel peace conference in Mauritania is exposing the stark contradiction between the continent’s rhetoric and its reality.

Habibah Waziri, Managing Director of BGR Consulting, which operates across Nigeria, Rwanda and Ghana, was scheduled to co-launch the Women in Youth Summit at the Africa Conference for Peace in Mauritania.

Her mission was to help shape discussions on designing a peace architecture that is “intelligent, secure, inclusive, culturally grounded, and human.”

Instead, her visa was rejected twice.

Mobility Barriers Highlight Continental Fragmentation

Speaking from her base in Nigeria, Waziri detailed the logistical absurdities that African professionals routinely face when attempting to move across their own continent.

To travel from Nigeria to Mauritania for the conference, her most realistic flight options were Air France and Turkish Airlines—carriers that would require her to leave the continent entirely, transit through Europe or Istanbul, and then fly back into Africa. Her first preference, Royal Air Maroc, proved impractical within the constraints she faced.

“Across the continent, countries are falling out of the ECOWAS block, retreating from regional commitments in favour of herded national postures,” Waziri said. “Mobility, which was once the promise, is becoming collateral damage.”

Visa Rejections and the “Risk” of African Passports

Waziri pointed to the systemic barriers embedded in visa processes across Africa, noting that her Nigerian passport—carried by one of the continent’s most economically active populations—is consistently “read as a risk and not as potential.”

“This perception quietly shapes outcomes of visas, which in turn affects opportunity, access, and free movement,” she explained. “And perception, when left unchallenged, hardens policy.”

The dual barriers of fragmented air connectivity and restrictive visa regimes create what she describes as a fundamental obstacle to the very integration African leaders profess to champion.

Women Bear the Brunt of Closed Borders

Waziri emphasised that the impact of these barriers falls disproportionately on African women, who serve as what she calls “the connective tissue” of the continent’s economy and social fabric.

“Across Africa, women already power economic development through cross-border trade, informal markets, community-level peace building, and emerging digital economies,” she stated.

“When borders close, women’s economic power contracts. When visas fail, women’s leadership disappears from decision-making spaces. Peace processes become narrower, economies become less resilient, and futures become less inclusive.”

Ambition Without Infrastructure

As AU leaders discussed the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and other integration initiatives, Waziri warned that grand declarations amount to little without practical foundations.

“While leaders are in Addis Ababa to chart Africa’s new future, the present is reminding us firmly that this ambition without infrastructure is honestly just symbolism,” she said. “Africa will continue to speak powerfully, but empty.”

She argued that if the continent structurally limits who gets to speak, who gets to move, and who gets to shape outcomes, then the vision of unity remains hollow.

“Peace cannot be built in isolation,” Waziri added. “And the future cannot be negotiated by half of the continent.”

Call for Practical Integration

Waziri’s experience underscores a growing demand among African professionals for tangible progress on freedom of movement, including:

  • Streamlined visa processes that treat African passport holders as assets rather than risks
  • Strengthened intra-African air connectivity that reduces reliance on non-African carriers
  • Recognition that mobility is essential for trade, peace-building, and inclusive development

“Our work is still ahead, and the signal could not be clearer,” she concluded. “Our infrastructure has not yet caught up with our ambition.”

The African Union summit continues through this week, with leaders expected to issue declarations on continental integration.

Whether those declarations will translate into the practical changes that professionals like Waziri require remains an open question.

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