Archive January 29, 2026

TotalEnergies restarts $20bn LNG project in Mozambique after 5-year freeze

French energy giant TotalEnergies has restarted construction of a $20bn liquefied natural gas (LNG) project in Mozambique after being forced to pause operations indefinitely owing to escalating violence in the region.

The company’s executive Patrick Pouyanne and Mozambique’s President Daniel Chapo jointly announced the official relaunch of the project on Thursday at a ceremony near the construction site in Afungi, located in the gas-rich Cabo Delgado province in Mozambique’s northeast.

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The project, considered one of the largest LNG projects on the continent, was suspended in 2021 as Mozambique, with the help of regional forces, battled to contain ISIL-linked fighting that has killed more than 6,400 people in the past eight years, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED).

The project, which is designed to produce more than 13 million tonnes of LNG annually, is expected to come on stream in 2029, potentially generating as much as $35bn for government coffers over its lifetime from taxes, oil profits and other contributions, according to Chapo, cited by Reuters news agency.

Pouyanne said in a statement issued by TotalEnergies that the project would bring “significant economic benefits” to the country, creating up to 7,000 direct jobs for Mozambicans during construction, with contracts awarded to local companies “expected to amount to more than USD 4 billion”.

Security is deemed to have improved in Cabo Delgado, particularly with the deployment of Rwandan soldiers around the Afungi construction site. But the delays have cost significant sums of money, forcing the project’s parties to renegotiate terms.

Environmental and human rights concerns

Environmental and human rights groups have denounced the development, claiming it will bring little benefit to Mozambicans, more than 80 percent of whom lived below the poverty line of $3 per day in 2022, according to World Bank data.

Campaign group Friends of the Earth has called the project “a carbon timebomb with huge climate impacts”, alleging that it has also become a lightning rod for human rights abuses, including  “killings, beheadings and entire communities fleeing the Cabo Delgado region”.

TotalEnergies is facing two legal proceedings in France, including a manslaughter investigation, after survivors and relatives of victims of the 2021 attack accused it of failing to protect its subcontractors.

It is also the subject of a complaint for “complicity in war crimes, torture and enforced disappearance” filed by the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR), a German NGO, with France’s national “anti-terrorism” prosecutor.

“The oil and gas major is accused of having directly financed and materially supported the Joint Task Force, composed of Mozambican armed forces, which between July and September 2021, allegedly detained, tortured and killed dozens of civilians on TotalEnergies’ gas site,” said ECCHR last month.

TotalEnergies rejects all the accusations.

Fubara: APC Govs Not ‘Worried’ Over Impeachment Process, Actions Are Being Taken — Sule

Nasarawa State Governor, Abdullahi Sule, has said governors elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) are not overly concerned about the ongoing impeachment process involving Rivers State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, describing it as a matter already before the courts.

Sule made the remarks while appearing as a guest on Thursday’s edition of Politics Today, a current affairs programme aired on Channels Television.

Responding to questions on whether APC governors were worried that one of their colleagues might be impeached and whether any steps were being taken to avert such an outcome, the Nasarawa governor said the process was governed strictly by law and due process.

“I’m not worried because I think it’s an issue of the court. I am not worried about anybody impeaching anyone. You don’t just wake up and impeach somebody without going through the due process,” Sule said.

He added that while governors were naturally concerned about developments affecting their colleagues, there was no cause for alarm.

“Of course, whatever happens to any of our colleagues, we are worried, but we are not so worried to the point of saying he [Fubara] is going to be impeached.

“From all indications, actions are being taken. Courts are taking decisions. The Chief Judge is taking a position on that. So, for that reason, we are not worried,” Sule stated.

Impeachment Process 

A photo combo of Fubara and the RSHA.

Meanwhile, the latest attempt to impeach Governor Fubara has stalled due to legal and procedural hurdles.

On January 23, 2026, a Rivers State High Court sitting in Oyigbo adjourned the impeachment case indefinitely, ruling that the Court of Appeal must first determine pending appeals filed by the Speaker and other lawmakers.

The decision effectively halted immediate impeachment proceedings.

READ ALSO: [Impeachment Move] Rivers Chief Judge Rejects Assembly’s Request To Probe Fubara

Similarly, the Chief Judge of Rivers State, Justice Simeon Amadi, declined to constitute an investigative panel, citing existing court orders and the principle that courts should not act on matters already under judicial consideration.

This marks the third impeachment attempt against Fubara in less than three years.

The most recent effort commenced on January 8, 2026, led by the Martin Amaewhule faction of the Rivers State House of Assembly.

The lawmakers accused the governor of gross misconduct, including failure to present appropriation bills, alleged unauthorised expenditure of public funds, withholding lawmakers’ allocations, and the demolition of the Assembly complex in 2023.

WIKE AND SIMINALAYI
Photo combo of Nyesom Wike (L) and Siminalayi Fubara (R)

The impeachment move was widely seen as part of the lingering political rivalry between Governor Fubara and his predecessor, Nyesom Wike, despite earlier reconciliation efforts by President Bola Tinubu.

Governor Fubara has repeatedly urged calm, expressing confidence in divine intervention while maintaining his focus on governance.

APC’s Internal Matters, Rivers Crisis

Nasarawa State Governor, Abdullahi Sule speaks on Channels Television’s Politics Today.

The Nasarawa governor was also asked about the recent wave of defections, the integration of new members into the APC, and the internal tensions within the party, particularly in Rivers State.

On party congresses and membership integration, Sule said APC’s tradition ensured inclusiveness, noting that no member was “excluded” from participating in party activities.

Addressing the Rivers State crisis and the role of party stakeholders, including the State Assembly and APC stalwarts loyal to former governor and Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, Sule stressed that the issue remained a party matter rather than one for the Progressive Governors’ Forum.

“We have asked the party to go and study the situation [in Rivers] and brief us if they need anything from the Progressive Governors’ Forum, because it’s purely a party affair for another state,” he said.

He disclosed that members of the APC National Working Committee were present during discussions and had been mandated to investigate developments in the state.

‘British elite women’s basketball is at a crossroads’

The former general manager of Great Britain’s women’s basketball team says he resigned from his “dream job” because he could no longer be “part of a programme which is being set up for failure”.

Jacob Lloyd, who took up the position in August, announced he was leaving the role via a joint statement which also confirmed the exit of head coach Stella Kaltsidou.

The duo’s decision to leave the national set-up is the latest blow to the sport, which is still feeling the effects of the British Basketball Federation (BBF) entering liquidation in November.

After the collapse of the BBF and its funding, stakeholders including Super League Basketball and nations’ governing bodies were tasked with ensuring international schedules continued.

However, Lloyd – speaking exclusively to the BBC about his resignation – said elite women’s basketball in Britain was now at a “crossroads” and he feared for its future.

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GB’s women are due to start preparations for three EuroBasket qualifiers in March – but Lloyd claimed “communicational and operational” obstacles meant he and his team had been unable to inform players about squad selection or confirm plans for travel and accommodation.

“We need to make sure that the level of service provided to our athletes meets the level of athlete that they are,” Lloyd said.

“So if they’re an elite, Olympic or WNBA-level athlete, we’ve got to be able to provide the minimum standards. We’re in the trenches, let’s be honest. I’m hopeful that if it gets into the right hands, it can be rescued.

“But realistically we’re a million miles off where we were in 2019 when we finished fourth at EuroBasket and we’re a million miles off from where we were before 2012.

“If we don’t try and curtail this issue and engage the players and start to think about the future I think we could be that far backwards.”

Basketball England thanked Lloyd and Kaltsidou for their “commitment and service in leading and supporting the team” and confirmed their successors would be announced shortly.

A Basketball England statement added: “We acknowledge that the GB senior teams are facing a challenging period following the demise of the BBF and that resources are limited, but together with our partners and fellow stakeholders in the British game, we are working together to deliver the games and support the teams in the manner in which they deserve in the upcoming windows.”

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We’ll do whatever it takes for Ospreys – Williams

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Ospreys legend Shane Williams says he and his former team-mates will do everything they can to save their old team.

Ospreys’ owners – Y11 Sport and Media – have been named as the preferred bidder by the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) to take over domestic rivals Cardiff, who went into administration in April 2025.

Should the deal go through in the next month, Ospreys and Cardiff will continue for now as separate sides, but be owned by one organisation.

Former Wales wing Williams, along with ex-Ospreys players Alun Wyn Jones, Gavin Henson, Ian Gough and Ryan Jones, have signed a document calling for the Ospreys to remain as a top-tier team.

“We will do whatever it takes to hopefully mean the Ospreys will continue to exist,” Williams told the Scrum V The Warm Up podcast and TV programme.

“We are going to do whatever we can to make sure we get heard and hopefully make a change.”

The Ospreys could continue, but as a semi-professional outfit, beyond the summer of 2027.

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‘Uncertainty is upsetting’

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Williams says the uncertainty was unsettling with current Ospreys head coach Mark Jones saying the squad had heard nothing from Y11.

“Is there a conclusion, do we know what is happening?” said Williams, who is head of rugby at a west Wales school that plays in Welsh rugby’s schools and colleges premier league.

“The last few weeks have been quite upsetting for someone who has been affiliated with the Ospreys from the start, so I can’t imagine what the current guys are going through.

“It’s difficult and feels very personal for me. I have the boys who I teach coming up to me asking is there a chance the Ospreys will be gone because they can’t believe it.

“I am trying to explain and give the positives of it, but there aren’t any positives.”

Williams described how the past-player movement came about.

“We got together on a Whatsapp group and started speaking about what we can do as coaches and ex-players,” said Williams.

“For me and a lot of the other boys, we started the Ospreys, we were part of that identity.

“When you play rugby with players, even though when you finish and you go on different paths in life, you still stay close… you are always going to have that special bond.”

Williams hopes the players’ intervention has not come too late.

“We felt a bit obsolete, redundant in the fact we have not done much for the Ospreys of late,” said Williams.

“We needed to get our act together and prove how much the Ospreys means to us, the community and the current players and coaches.

“Mark Jones [Ospreys head coach] sent me a voice message in the week.

Most successful region

Ospreys celebrate a league title in 2012Huw Evans Picture Agency

Williams was part of the first Ospreys squad in 2003 and outlined the region’s credentials with four league titles and their ability to continually produce Wales internationals.

“We are the most successful region,” said Williams.

“You look at the players who have come through, some of the best in the world.

“We have had three players who are nominees for world player of the year at different levels.

“We have had players involved with league titles, Grand Slams and British and Irish Lions tour.”

Williams says he has seen the effect of teams disappearing after the change to regional rugby when nine clubs became five sides 23 years ago.

“I remember being at Neath in 2003 and being told the regions were coming in,” said Williams.

“I thought that means a lot of my mates are going to be without work and staff were going to lose their jobs.

“That was the case. I remember feeling bad for those people who did not have contracts. So it is such a difficult time.”

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Former Illinois deputy sentenced to 20 years for US killing of Sonya Massey

A former Illinois sheriff’s deputy has been sentenced to 20 years in prison for fatally shooting a 36-year-old woman who called police to her home for help.

The 2024 killing of Sonya Massey sparked widespread protests amid a wider reckoning over police conduct towards Black residents in the United States.

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Sean Grayson, 31, was convicted in October of second-degree murder for the fatal shooting. On Thursday, he received the maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

During sentencing, Grayson apologised, saying he wished he could bring Massey back. His lawyer had asked for a sentence of six years.

“I made a lot of mistakes that night. There were points when I should’ve acted, and I didn’t. I froze,” he said during the hearing. “I made terrible decisions that night. I’m sorry.”

Massey, who suffered from mental health issues, had called police to her home in the Illinois state capital, Springfield, saying she was afraid of a prowler outside.

Body camera footage of her exchange with police showed that Massey appeared confused, repeating, “Please, God.”

Inside her home, Grayson noticed a boiling pot of water and asked Sheriff’s Deputy Dawson Farley to move it. Instead, Massey went to the stove and picked up the pot, appearing to tease Grayson for moving away from “the hot, steaming water”.

She then said: “I rebuke you in the name of Jesus.”

Grayson drew his firearm. Massey set the pot down and ducked behind a counter. When she appeared to pick up the pot again, Grayson opened fire, hitting Massey three times in the face.

During the trial, Massey’s parents and two children said their lives had been forever changed.

“Today, I’m afraid to call the police in fear that I might end up like Sonya,” her mother Donna Massey said during the hearing.

Massey’s daughter Summer told reporters on Thursday that “20 years is not enough”.

Grayson was initially charged with three counts of first-degree murder, which could have led to a life sentence. However, the jury convicted him of the lesser charge of second-degree murder, arguing that evidence shows that Grayson honestly thought he was in danger.

Massey’s killing sparked a US Justice Department inquiry, after which the Sangamon County agreed to implement more de-escalation training for law enforcement and collect more use-of-force data.

The controversy also prompted the sheriff who hired Grayson to retire.