Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Niger, Benin En Route to Normalization of Ties Under Chinese Mediation

By Al Mayadeen English

9 Sep 2024 18:16

The Nigerien and Beninese foreign ministers hold talks on the sidelines of the 2024 Forum on China-Africa Cooperation in Beijing.

Delegations from Niger and Benin held, under Chinese mediation, talks on September 6 in the Chinese capital, Beijing, and discussed the ongoing normalization process between the two neighboring countries, the Nigerien press agency (ANP) reported on Monday.

The Nigerien Foreign Minister Bakary Yaou Sangare held talks on the sidelines of the 2024 Forum on China-Africa Cooperation in Beijing, with his Beninese counterpart, Olou Segou Adjadi Bakary, regarding bilateral cooperation between Niger and Benin.

During the meeting, the two ministers discussed the ongoing normalization process under the leadership of their respective heads of state and the relations between the two countries, according to a communique by the Nigerien Foreign Ministry.

The statement noted that both delegations welcomed the presentation, on August 6, 2024, of the figurative copies of the credentials of the new Beninese ambassador to Niger and agreed to schedule a mutually agreed date for the 12th session of the Niger-Benin Joint Cooperation Commission.

According to the communique, the Nigerien side expressed its security concerns, which are preventing the reopening of the border between the two countries, in line with previous discussions.

On its part, the Beninese delegation reassured Niger and reiterated its authorities' commitment to working toward the swift restoration of cooperation and the strengthening of trust between the two nations.

The statement also mentioned that both parties agreed to continue discussions between their respective authorities, notably during their upcoming meeting in New York on the sidelines of the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly.

Since the overthrow of Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum through a military coup, relations between Niger and Benin have remarkably deteriorated.

While Niamey reopened its border with Nigeria following the lifting of sanctions imposed by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), it refused to do the same with Benin.

This refusal stems from accusations made by the Nigerien authorities against Benin that it is hosting French bases in the north of its territory to train terrorists aimed at destabilizing Niger. These allegations were denied by both Benin and France.

The dispute reached a peak in June with the Beninese authorities arresting five Nigerien nationals from the Chinese oil company WAPCO-Niger who were overseeing the loading of Nigerien oil at the port of Sèmè-Kpodji in Benin.

Niamey described the incident as a "kidnapping" and threatened to take measures to secure their release. Benin, in turn, accused two members of the team of being agents with fake badges, sentencing them to 18 months in prison.

As of June 6, Niger shut down the valves of the pipeline transporting Nigerien oil to the port of Sèmè-Kpodji.

ANC Sets Sights on 2026 Local Government Elections for Redemption

The party wants to reassert its dominance in municipalities across Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal – which is where it suffered electoral setbacks.

ANC Secretary General Fikile Mbalula and Provincial Secretary TK Nciza address the media at a door-stop briefing on the purpose of the ANC NWC meeting with Gauteng PEC at Birchwood Hotel in Ekurhuleni on 9 September 2024. Picture: Supplied/ANC

JOHANNESBURG - The ANC says it will now shift its focus to the 2026 local government elections, particularly in provinces where it underperformed in this year’s general polls.

The party wants to reassert its dominance in municipalities across Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal – which is where it suffered electoral setbacks.

On Monday, the ANC’s national working committee met at Birchwood Hotel, in Boksburg, to reflect and review its dismal electoral performance.

ANC Secretary General Fikile Mbalula said the party wants to prevent a repeat of the significant setbacks it faced in the May 29th polls.

He said the organisation had started to strategise ways to potentially avoid another major defeat in the 2026 local government elections.

Mbalula asserted that the ANC would no longer entertain coalition arrangements in municipalities that don’t benefit both the party and its constituencies.

“We will not be part of any arrangement that does not guarantee stability going forward. We are one year to go to the elections and municipalities must delivery for our people.” 

The ANC underperformed in the last two local government elections, resulting in the loss of its majority in the Gauteng metros.

Mbalula, meanwhile, says there is an urgent need to resolve the party's internal squabbles, suggesting they’re affecting its stability.

He said indications are that factionalism within the party is doing it more harm than good.

“Intra-party organisation challenges, ANC squabbles, and factionalism are a big problem where we did not pull through as a unit and a force in terms of the targets we set for ourselves. In certain areas, certain people didn’t come to the party.”

Simelane Back in Parly to Face MPs Just Days After Defending VBS Mutual Bank Loan

Simelane was before the committee on Friday to explain the R500,000 loan from Gundo Wealth Solutions, a beneficiary of the now defunct VBS Mutual Bank.

Minister of justice and Constitutional Development Thembi Simelane appears before the portfolio committee on justice and correctional services to explain matters related to VBS Mutual Bank, 6 September 2024. Picture: Phando Jikelo/Parliament of SA

CAPE TOWN - Minister of Justice Thembi Simelane returns to Parliament on Tuesday to face members of Parliament (MPs) just a few days after defending her loan from a VBS Mutual Bank fixer.

Simelane was before the committee on Friday to explain the R500,000 loan from Gundo Wealth Solutions, a beneficiary of the now defunct VBS Mutual Bank.

But Tuesday's meeting with the justice committee will also feature Shamila Batohi and the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) regarding access to the Zondo commission database.

While the meeting with Simelane is not about the VBS Mutual Bank, the committee is expected to receive legal advice on how to deal with documents related to the loan agreement.

MPs on Friday had requested evidence that a loan agreement was signed and paid back as Simelane posited.

But the committee wants to be on the right side of the law and requested advice.

However, Simelane said on Monday that the matter was not in Parliament's power, and she only appeared for transparency.

“The matter falls outside the ambit of Parliament in the fact that I was not a member of Parliament. I can't be sent to ethics, but the committee felt it needs an explanation.”

Simelane also said she would be meeting with President Cyril Ramaphosa soon to explain further.

Kenyan Court Halts Proposed Leasing of JKIA to Adani

Tuesday September 10 2024

Motorists pass through security checks at the entrance of the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi. File | Nation Media Group

Summary

In the deal, the Indian firm would upgrade the airport, including the construction of a second runway.

KHRC and LSK argued that Kenya can raise the estimated $1.85 billion needed to expand the airport.

By SAM KIPLAGAT

Kenya’s High Court has temporarily suspended the proposed plans to lease the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) to Indian conglomerate Adani Enterprises.

In a case certified as urgent by the High Court, the Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC) and the Law Society of Kenya (LSK) challenged the push to take over the running of JKIA by the Indian company for a period of 30 years.

The two organisations argued that JKIA is a strategic and profitable national asset and the deal is, therefore, irrational and violates the principles of good governance, accountability, transparency, and prudent and responsible use of public money.

In the deal, the Indian firm would upgrade the airport, including the construction of a second runway and a new passenger terminal under a 30-year build-operate-transfer (BOT) contract.

KHRC and LSK, however, argued that Kenya can independently raise the estimated $1.85 billion or Ksh238 billion needed to expand JKIA without leasing the airport for the stated period.

“Thus, the Adani proposal is unaffordable, threatens job losses, exposes the public, is diproportionate to fiscal risk, and offers no value for money to the taxpayer,” lawyer Dudley Ochiel said in the application. 

High Court judge John Chigiti certified the case as urgent and granted temporary order, suspending the deal pending the determination of the case.

The judge directed the case to be mentioned on October 8, to get a judgment date.

Mr Ochiel submitted that the application will be rendered nugatory and moot if KAA and Adani are not stopped from signing the agreement and Adani goes ahead and acquires JKIA.

The two organisations said they have written unsuccessfully to JKIA, seeking information under Article 35(1) and (3) of the Constitution of Kenya and section 4 of the Access to Information Act.

It is LSK’s argument that Kenya would surrender the operational and profitable JKIA to Adani for 30 years in exchange for $1.85 billion. 

“Thus, the proposal would deprive the public of, and transfer to Adani, all the current revenues, receipts, expenditures and other financial transactions over JKIA. Although the project is dubbed a Built Operate Transfer, KAA would be handing over an existing and operational airport to Adani,” Mr Ochiel said. 

He added that in the end of the 30 years, Adani would, in perpetuity, retain an 18 percent equity stake in the aeronautical business at JKIA. 

“Thus, after 30 years, Adani would be entitled to an 18 percent concession fee starting at Ksh6 billion and increasing by 10 percent every five years forever. In this way, the Adani proposal violates Article 201(c), demanding that the burden and benefits of using resources and public borrowing be shared equitably between present and future generations,” he said.

He submitted that under the deal, Adani would acquire nearly 30 acres of unencumbered land next to JKIA for airport property investment and development business.

Besides, the proposal entitles Adani to operate tax-free for ten years, import labour, and obtain free work visas, thus depriving Kenyan workers of their livelihood, contrary to Articles 26, 41, and 43 of the Constitution.

Rating Agencies and Africa: Why There is Bias Against the Continent

Tuesday September 10 2024

An aeriel view of Lagos. Nigeria challenged Moody’s rating, saying the agency lacked understanding of the country’s environment. File | AFP

By THE CONVERSATION

Rating agency Fitch recently warned that the rapid spread of the mpox virus in sub-Saharan Africa could add to the fiscal pressures many countries in the region are already experiencing.

The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organisation have declared the latest outbreak of mpox in Africa a health emergency. An epidemic in the Democratic Republic of Congo has spread to neighbouring countries.

Seven countries rated by Fitch – Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa and Uganda – have confirmed mpox cases.

Fitch cautioned investors about possible under-reporting of mpox cases and that the outbreak could accelerate, raising the prospect of increased pressure on government finances.

But is this alarm call necessary? Or is it exaggerated?

Based on my research into rating agencies over the past 10 years, there are clear biases in the way they determine African sovereign risk.

Fitch’s statement can be viewed as another case of a rating agency looking at events in Africa through a more negative prism than the one it uses for countries in the west.

Several studies have found evidence that there are biases with rating agencies overstating certain risk factors on the continent.

A comparative analysis of 30 countries in Africa and other regions highlights a lack of uniformity in the application of the economic indicators in ratings.

This lies behind the African Union’s decision to adopt a declaration on the establishment of an Africa Credit Rating Agency.

But some rating analysts have come to the defence of rating agencies, arguing that there is no bias against African countries.

For their part, rating agencies maintain that their methodologies are objective. And a recent article by news agency Reuters claims that there were no studies presenting evidence of statistical bias in ratings against Africa.

In my view these claims raise the question: what measure is being used to assess bias? This is important because bias can manifest in different ways – through decisions about what to measure (quantitative), or through more subtle forms of qualitative bias.

I argue in this article that credit ratings are biased against Africa in subjective ways. And that one of the key contributing factors is the location of rating analysts.

A thin presence

Most rating analysts are based in Europe, Asia and the US. Of the big three, Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s each have a single office in South Africa.

They have a total of five to 10 analysts covering about 25 sovereigns, corporates and sub-sovereigns. Fitch Ratings closed its only Africa office in 2015.

This raises questions about the workload of analysts and the accuracy of their ratings.

Rating analysts based abroad visit the countries they rate for a maximum of two weeks in a year.

This is insufficient time for analysts to adequately understand and evaluate risk factors. Inadequate consultations and short visits have led to analysts basing their assessments on pessimistic assumptions, desktop reviews, virtual discussions and publicly available information.

These processes have also omitted critical data that often is best obtained by being inside a country. Estimations of subjective risk factor in policy effectiveness, quality of institutions, political and geopolitical dynamics.

The conservatism of analysts, a lack of understanding of the context and ratings errors have been a recurring feature of African ratings.

Research shows that familiarity with a country, being closer to a country being rated and home bias (towards the home country of a rating analyst) result in analysts assigning better sovereign rating scores than they do to countries they are not familiar with or live very far from.

Where there's room for bias

To understand how bias might happen, it’s important to break down the credit rating methodology.

For example, S&P Global’s sovereign rating methodology looks at five key factors. Two are primarily quantitative – economic and monetary. The other three are essentially qualitative – institutional, external and fiscal.

On qualitative factors, rating agencies use a score from 1 to 6. Rating analysts have considerable discretion in assigning qualitative judgments on the scores. The judgments could easily be driven by bias.

Credit rating researchers Patrycja Klusak, Yurtsev Uymaz and Rasha Alsakka have found that a connection between a European finance minister and a top executive at one of the three international rating agencies can favourably skew a rating decision.

A finance minister’s connection to a rating agency’s director, executive or senior analyst could raise a sovereign rating by between 0.5 and 1.3 notches.

African rating errors

Here are some examples of errors made by rating agencies in their assessment of African countries.

Tunisia: Fitch made an error in a December 2022 review of Tunisia. Fitch published its rating of Tunisia outside the scheduled calendar, without considering all available and relevant information. 

Fitch corrected this three months later, but only to comply with the European Securities Markets Authority’s regulatory requirement for rating agencies not to deviate from the calendar of sovereign rating publications.

In my view this error could have been avoided if Fitch had had a local presence in the country.

Cameroon: In affirming Cameroon’s Caa1 rating, Moody’s viewed the government’s decision to grant a 5% salary increase to civil servants and other public sector workers as negative.

Cameroon also suspended a proposed additional personal income tax, which Moody’s interpreted as a negative development for the country’s credit profile. But Cameroon fiscal metrics were moderate.

The country could afford the pay hike. Markets considered its fiscal budget as modest relative to its peers with a similar population profile.

In addition, rating agencies had wrong ratings for Cameroon from November 2022 to August 2023. Their ratings were based on unverified information on late external debt service payments between January and November 2022.

The rating agencies’ action one year after, and reports on Cameroon’s delayed debt service payments, suggested that the agencies did not have timely and factual official information.

If the agencies had had sufficient engagements with the relevant government officials, their analysts would have had such information.

Nigeria: Moody’s had to reverse its downgrade of Nigeria’s outlook within seven months. As the reason for changing its mind, it cited positive economic policy developments from the government’s removal of fuel subsidies and the country’s unified foreign exchange rates.

But these economic factors had not changed between the downgrade and its reversal. The Nigerian government had challenged Moody’s initial decision, arguing that the rating agency didn’t understand the country’s domestic environment.

The reversal of Nigeria’s rating direction in the short term could be evidence that the rating agency had erred in its initial analysis.

Way forward

Locating more analysts on the continent and widening the scope and time of consultations will address some of the biases in how rating agencies assess African countries.

Where analysts are already Africa-based, they need to extend their scope of stakeholder consultations and to spend more time in the countries they rate.

The interpretation of events and perception of risk by locally based analysts will be different from those who are foreign based.

This will partly address contestation around the bias and lack of adequate consultations in Africa ratings.

Misheck Mutize, Post Doctoral Researcher, Graduate School of Business (GSB), University of Cape Town.

Mombasa Port Receives its First LNG-powered Ship

Tuesday September 10 2024

The 282.9 metre-long Vessel Mv Arctic Tern offloading palm oil at the Port of Mombasa in this photo taken August 23, 2024. Kevin Odit | Nation Media Group

By Kevin Mutai

By ANTHONY KITIMO

The first-ever tanker powered by liquefied natural gas (LNG) to call on the Mombasa port berthed about two weeks ago, an itinerary revealed, boosting the gateway’s go-green emissions strategy in line with the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (Marpol Convention).

Mv Arctic Tern, currently sailing under the flag of Singapore, delivered a consignment of palm oil from Malaysia to Mombasa. The vessel, which was commissioned on March 14, 2024, is 183 metres long and 32 metres wide.

As emissions regulations become more stringent, many ship owners are turning to alternative fuels to power their vessels, with LNG emerging as a popular choice.

LNG used to fuel ships is produced from natural gas extracted from underground reserves, including both onshore and offshore gas fields.

The arrival of Mv Artic Tern is a boost for the Port of Mombasa as it joins other seaports around the world in implementing MARPOL, the International Maritime Organisation's (IMO) main convention for the prevention of pollution of the marine environment by ships from operational or accidental causes.

According to Julius Koech, Director of Maritime Safety at the Kenya Maritime Authority (KMA), the use of alternative fuels is part of the maritime and shipping industry's efforts to mitigate the effects of climate change.

"The levels of LNG emissions when burned are significantly low as compared to heavy fuels, which are being used, as it is also an advantage to the ship owner in terms of cost benefits in acquiring fuel,” he said.

Under the Marpol regulations, all ships of 400 gross tonnage and above that are engaged in voyages to ports or offshore terminals under the jurisdiction of other parties must have an International Air Pollution Prevention Certificate, issued by the ship’s flag State.

To obtain the certificate, ships must use low-sulphur fuel oil to meet IMO requirements, while refineries can blend high-sulphur (non-compliant) fuel oil with a low-sulphur fuel oil to produce a compliant one.

Mr Koech said more LNG-powered vessels are expected to enter the market as more players comply with anti-pollution laws.

"Moving forward we are going to see these kinds of ships plying the seas because the ambitious plan from the international arena is to decarbonise the shipping industry by 2050," he said.

Last year, the Port of Mombasa joined other ports around the world in implementing the new IMO Global Sulphur Cap 2020 rule, which came into force on January 1, 2020.

The rule requires all seagoing vessels to use of low-sulphur fuel as part of a global effort to reduce air pollution by cutting sulphur oxide emissions.

Mombasa-based Alba Petroleum and Alfoss Energy Ltd were contracted in December last year to refuel ships docking at the port with products containing 0.5 percent sulphur, compared to the previous limit of 3.5 percent.

The law affects all ship operators, oil refiners, and bunker suppliers. The International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships aims to reduce sulphur oxide emissions from ships by 77 percent or about 8.5 million tonnes a year.

Police in Guinea-Bissau Seize Nearly 3 Tons of Cocaine on Plane from Venezuela

By SAMBU ASSANA and MARK BANCHEREAU

3:05 PM EDT, September 9, 2024

BISSAU, Guinea-Bissau (AP) — Police in Guinea-Bissau seized 2.6 tons of cocaine from a plane that arrived from Venezuela in the West African country’s capital, Bissau, over the weekend, judicial police said Monday.

The agents confiscated 78 bales of drugs that were smuggled in on a Gulfstream IV aircraft during a raid on Saturday afternoon at Bissau’s Osvaldo Vieira International Airport, the police said in a statement.

The crew of five, which included two Mexican nationals as well as citizens of Colombia, Ecuador and Brazil, were arrested, including the pilot.

Cocaine seizures are becoming increasingly common in West Africa. The region has become a key transit hub for drugs from Latin America and Southwest Asia destined for Europe, according to a U.N. report released earlier this year.

Guinea-Bissau in particular is known as a preferred route for international drug cartels. Earlier this year, the son of the country’s former president, Malam Bacai Sanha, was sentenced to more than six years in prison by a U.S. court for leading an international heroin trafficking ring.

The cocaine seizure on Saturday was carried out in close cooperation with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the Maritime Analysis and Operations Centre–Narcotics, a European organization, the judicial police said in its statement.

Neighboring Senegal also announced a record-breaking cocaine seizure of 1137 kilograms (2,506 pounds) — the most ever intercepted on land and valued at $146 million — near an artisanal mine in the east of the country earlier this year.

Rejected Poll Monitors Accuse Tunisia’s Election Authorities of Bias

FILE - A man dips his finger in ink after casting his ballot at a polling station in Tunis, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2022. (AP Photo/Hassene Dridi, File)

6:01 PM EDT, September 9, 2024

TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — Election officials in Tunisia doubled down Monday on their decision to deny accreditation to some election observer groups who say the move shows the October presidential contest in the North African country won’t be free and fair.

The Independent High Authority for Elections, or ISIE, said in a statement that several civil society groups that had applied for accreditation had received a “huge amount” of foreign funding of a “suspicious origin” and therefore had to be denied accreditation to observe the election.

Though the ISIE did not explicitly name the groups, one of its commission members said last weekend that it sent formal allegations against two specific groups to Tunisia’s public prosecutor, making similar claims that they took funding from abroad.

The two organizations, I-Watch and Mourakiboun (which means “Observers” in Arabic) are not the first civil society groups to be pursued by authorities in Tunisia. Under President Kais Saied, non-governmental organizations have increasingly been targeted for their work, which spans from aid for migrants to human rights to local development efforts.

Saied has throughout his tenure accused civil society groups of having nefarious motives and being puppets of foreign countries critical of his style of governance. He has alleged that NGOs that receive funding from abroad intend to disrupt the North African nation’s social fabric and domestic politics.

Some of the groups targeted have increasingly criticized authorities’ decisions to arrest potential candidates and bar others from running over the past several months. Other groups, including I-Watch and Mourakiboun, have applied for accreditation to act as independent election observers for the Oct. 6 vote.

In a statement, I-Watch blasted ISIE’s efforts to call its funding into question and called it “a desperate attempt to distract public opinion by hiding the violations it committed and its failure to implement law.”

Siwar Gmati, a member of the watchdog group, told The Associated Press that any foreign funding that I-Watch received for specific projects in the past was provided in accordance with Tunisian law and disclosed transparently.

“We haven’t asked donors for funding relating to this electoral monitoring mission,” she said, denying ISIE’s claims.

Financial disclosures published on I-Watch’s website show some of its past programs have been bankrolled by groups such as Transparency International and Deutsche Welle Akademie (DW) as well as the European Union and the U.S. Embassy.

Gmati said I-Watch no longer accepts U.S. funding and is engaged in two projects with the EU it received funding for last year.

The quarrel with prospective election observers is the latest in a string of controversies that have plagued ISIE in recent months, during which critics have accused it of lacking independence and acting on behalf of the president. Last week, dozens of Tunisians critical of the commission’s role protested outside its headquarters.

Tensions rose last week after the electoral authority published a final list of candidates that included Saied and only two challengers, dismissing a court order requiring that it reinstate three others it had previously barred from running.

The electoral commission argued that it didn’t receive the court’s ruling by the legal deadline. Critics called the dismissal politically motivated and a court spokesperson told local radio that ignoring a court order in such a way was unprecedented in Tunisia.

ISIE denied I-Watch’s application to observe the election in July and the NGO appealed and requested for clarifications in August. Despite ISIE’s public statements, Gmati said that it had not yet responded directly to I-Watch’s requests.

I-Watch called ISIE’s public statements a “flimsy pretext” to exclude election monitors from observing the Oct. 6 presidential vote.

“It has clearly become involved in the presidency’s program and has become a tool of the dictatorship,” the watchdog group said of the election authority.

The conflict between authorities and the watchdog groups is the latest matter to stain this year’s election season in Tunisia, where presidential candidates have been arrested, barred from participation or denied a place on the ballot. It marks a departure from elections the country has held since it became a bastion for democracy after toppling its longtime dictator in the 2011 Arab Spring. Observers have previously praised Tunisia for holding free and fair elections.

Since Saied took power, however, things have changed for Tunisia’s once-vibrant NGO scene. In 2022, he targeted civil society groups that accept foreign funding, and has said that nobody has the right to interfere in Tunisia’s politics and choices.

Man Accused of Setting on Fire a Ugandan Olympic Athlete Dies of Burns

FILE -Rebecca Cheptegei, competes at the Discovery 10km road race in Kapchorwa, Uganda, Jan. 20, 2023. (AP Photo, File)

By EVELYNE MUSAMBI

4:46 AM EDT, September 10, 2024

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — A man accused of dousing gasoline on an Ugandan Olympic athlete, causing her death days later, has succumbed to burns sustained in the attack, according to the Kenyan hospital where he was treated.

Dickson Ndiema was admitted at the Moi Referral Hospital in the western Eldoret city for burns covering 30% of his body. Ndiema is alleged to have sustained the injuries after setting on fire Olympic athlete Rebecca Cheptegei, who died last Thursday with 80% of burns on her body.

The hospital spokesperson, Owen Menach, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the hospital would issue a statement later but confirmed that the patient had died.

Ndiema and Cheptegei were said to have quarreled over a piece of land that the athlete bought in Kenya, according to a report filed by the local chief.

Cheptegei competed in the women’s marathon at the Paris Olympics less than a month before the attack. She finished in 44th place.

Cheptegei’s parents said their daughter bought land in the Trans Nzoia county to be near Kenya’s many athletic training centers.

The athlete’s father, Joseph Cheptegei, told reporters last week that Ndiema, his daughter’s former boyfriend, was stalking and threatening her and the family had informed police.

He said he wanted justice and lamented that the suspect was not being guarded at his hospital bed and expressed concern that he might escape.

Cheptegei is expected to be buried at her home in Uganda on Saturday.

First Doses of Mpox Vaccine from the United States Arrive in Congo

FILE - A health worker attends to a mpox patient, at a treatment centre in Munigi, eastern Congo, Monday, Aug. 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Moses Sawasawa, File)

By JEAN-YVES KAMALE

9:26 AM EDT, September 10, 2024

KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — Authorities in Congo said that 50,000 doses of mpox vaccine from the United States arrived in the country on Tuesday, a week after the first batch arrived from the European Union.

Adults in Equateur, South Kivu and Sankuru, the three most affected provinces, will be vaccinated first, starting on Oct. 2, Cris Kacita Osako, coordinator of Congo’s Monkeypox Response Committee, told The Associated Press.

Last week, the first batch of mpox vaccines arrived in the capital of Congo, the center of the outbreak. The 100,000 doses of the JYNNEOS vaccine, manufactured by the Danish company Bavarian Nordic, were donated by the EU through HERA, the bloc’s agency for health emergencies. Another 100,000 were delivered over the weekend.

The 50,000 doses from the U.S. will be of the same JYNNEOS vaccine.

The 250,000 doses are just a fraction of the 3 million doses authorities have said are needed to end the mpox outbreaks in Congo, the epicenter of the global health emergency. EU countries pledged to donate more than 500,000 others, but the timeline for their delivery remained unclear.

Since the start of 2024, there have been 5,549 confirmed mpox cases across the continent, with 643 associated deaths, representing a sharp escalation in both infections and fatalities compared to previous years. The cases in Congo constituted 91% of the total number. Most mpox infections in Congo and Burundi, the second most affected country, are in children under age 15.

Last week, the Africa Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization launched a continent-wide response plan to the outbreak of mpox, three weeks after WHO declared outbreaks in 12 African countries a global emergency.

Congo issued an emergency approval of the vaccine, which has already been used in Europe and the United States in adults. For the moment, the rollout will be reserved for adults, with priority targeted groups being those who have been in close contact with infected people and sex workers, the Africa CDC Director-General Dr. Jean Kaseya told reporters last week.

The European Medicines Agency is examining additional data to be able to administer it to children ranging in age from 12 to 17, which could happen at the end of the month, HERA Director-General Laurent Muschel said.

The next batch of mpox vaccines will come from Japan and could arrive as early as this weekend, Kacita Osako told the AP, without specifying how many doses.

Monday, September 09, 2024

Israel Lobbying US Congress to Pressure South Africa to Drop ICJ Genocide Case – Report

September 9, 2024

South Africa has asked the Court to order urgent measures in the Gaza Strip. (Image: Palestine Chronicle)

By Palestine Chronicle Staff  

“We are asking you to immediately work with lawmakers on the federal and state level, with governors and Jewish organizations to put pressure on South Africa to change its policy towards Israel …”

Israel is lobbying members of the US Congress to pressure South Africa to drop its case at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) accusing Tel Aviv of genocide in its ongoing war on Gaza, according to the Axios news website.

South Africa filed a case against Israel in late December arguing that it had violated its obligations under the 1948 Genocide Convention. The country has until October 28 to provide the UN court with its arguments “for continuing the case against Israel,” the report said.

Citing an Israeli foreign ministry cable obtained by Axios, the report said that according to Israeli officials, the Israeli foreign ministry “started a diplomatic campaign in recent weeks to press South Africa not to push forward with the case at the ICJ.

“The U.S. Congress is a main tool in the effort.”

Threats to Suspend Relations

On Monday, the Israeli foreign ministry “sent a classified cable” to the Israeli embassy in Washington, DC, and to all Israeli consulates in the U.S.” about South Africa’s ICJ case, the report stated.

“We are asking you to immediately work with lawmakers on the federal and state level, with governors and Jewish organizations to put pressure on South Africa to change its policy towards Israel and to make clear that continuing their current actions like supporting Hamas and pushing anti-Israeli moves in international courts will come with a heavy price,” the cable read.

The Axios report said that Israeli diplomats “were instructed to ask members of Congress to issue public statements condemning South Africa’s actions against Israel and threaten that it could lead to suspending U.S. trade relations with South Africa.”

This, continued the report, was “unlikely to happen” as the US would want to “maintain its relationship with South Africa in order to counter the influence of Russia and China.”

‘Heavy Price’

The diplomats were also instructed, “to ask members of Congress and Jewish organizations in the U.S. to reach out directly to South African diplomats in the U.S. and make clear South Africa would pay a heavy price if it doesn’t change its policy.”

In addition, they were instructed, “to pursue was pushing legislation against South Africa on the state and federal levels ‘that even if they won’t materialize, presenting them and talking about them will be important’ in trying to influence South African policy.”

The diplomats were asked to “lobby for hearings about South Africa’s policy towards Israel in state legislatures.”

Israeli officials also said that Israel hopes the new coalition government in South Africa “will take a different approach to Israel and the war in Gaza,” the report stated.

The Israeli foreign ministry declined to comment to Axios and the South African embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment, it said.

‘Protect Palestinians’ Rights’ – South Africa

In the recent national elections in May, the ruling ANC party lost the majority it had held in government since the first democratic elections held in 1994.

In July, the country’s newly appointed Foreign Minister Ronald Lamola however said that the country will continue to leverage global institutions to defend Palestinian rights and ensure the equitable application of international law for all.

“South Africa will continue to act within global institutions to protect the rights of Palestinians in Gaza and ensure the fair application of international law for all,” he said in his first public discussion on foreign policy in Cape Town since his appointment.

“Notably, South Africa will continue to do everything within its power to preserve the existence of the Palestinian people as a group, to end all acts of apartheid and genocide against the Palestinian people and to walk with them towards the realisation of their collective right to self-determination and this informed our application to the International Court of Justice,” he added.

Lamola pointed out that South Africa “also led the referral” by six states of the situation in Palestine to the International Criminal Court (ICC).

“We will continue preparing and managing the ICJ case against Israel and providing observations on the situation in Palestine before the ICC,” he pledged.

ICJ Order

In January, the ICJ ordered Israel to take measures to prevent and punish direct incitement of genocide in its ongoing war in Gaza.

What Does the ICJ Ruling Mean for Gaza? – Intl. Law Expert Answers

According to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, 40,988 Palestinians have been killed, and 94,825 wounded in Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza starting on October 7.

Moreover, at least 11,000 people are unaccounted for, presumed dead under the rubble of their homes throughout the Strip.

Palestinian and international organizations say that the majority of those killed and wounded are women and children.

The Israeli war has resulted in an acute famine, mostly in northern Gaza, resulting in the death of many Palestinians, mostly children.

(The Palestine Chronicle)

Funeral Held for an American Activist a Witness Says Was Shot Dead by Israeli Troops

By IMAD ISSIED

1:08 PM EDT, September 9, 2024

NABLUS, West Bank (AP) — The Palestinian Authority held a funeral procession Monday for an American activist who a witness says was shot and killed by Israeli forces last week following a demonstration against settlements in the occupied West Bank.

Dozens of mourners — including several leading officials of the Western-backed Palestinian Authority — attended the procession for Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, a 26-year-old from Seattle who also held Turkish citizenship.

Eygi’s body was draped in a Palestinian flag and her face was covered with a traditional black-and-white checkered scarf as security forces carried her and then placed her into a Palestinian ambulance.

Turkish Foreign Ministry Spokesman Oncu Keceli said his country was working on repatriating Eygi’s remains for burial in the Aegean coastal town of Didim as per her family’s wishes. Because the land crossing between the West Bank and Jordan was closed Sunday after an attack on Israeli civilians, the ministry was trying to have the body flown to Turkey.

AP correspondent Charles de Ledesma reports Palestinians hold a funeral procession for a US-Turkish activist shot dead in the West Bank.

U.S. officials did not respond to a request for comment.

Jonathan Pollak, an Israeli peace activist who participated in Friday’s protest with Eygi, said she posed no threat when Israeli forces shot her. He said the killing happened during a period of calm after clashes between soldiers and Palestinian protesters.

Pollak said he saw two Israeli soldiers mount the roof of a nearby home, train a gun in the group’s direction and fire, with one of the bullets striking Eygi in the head.

The Israeli military says it is investigating what happened. On Saturday it said an “initial inquiry” found that security forces had been deployed to disperse a riot near the town of Beita involving Palestinian and Israeli civilians that “included mutual rock hurling.” The security forces had fired shots in the air, the military said.

Eygi’s family has called on the Biden administration to launch an independent investigation into the killing. The family’s statement was published by International Solidarity Movement, the organization Eygi was volunteering with at the time of her death.

The West Bank has seen a surge of violence since the Israel-Hamas wa r began in October, with increasing Israeli raids, attacks by Palestinian militants on Israelis, and attacks by Israeli settlers on Palestinians.

Funeral Held for an American Activist a Witness Says Was Shot Dead by Israeli Troops

By IMAD ISSIED

1:08 PM EDT, September 9, 2024

NABLUS, West Bank (AP) — The Palestinian Authority held a funeral procession Monday for an American activist who a witness says was shot and killed by Israeli forces last week following a demonstration against settlements in the occupied West Bank.

Dozens of mourners — including several leading officials of the Western-backed Palestinian Authority — attended the procession for Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, a 26-year-old from Seattle who also held Turkish citizenship.

Eygi’s body was draped in a Palestinian flag and her face was covered with a traditional black-and-white checkered scarf as security forces carried her and then placed her into a Palestinian ambulance.

Turkish Foreign Ministry Spokesman Oncu Keceli said his country was working on repatriating Eygi’s remains for burial in the Aegean coastal town of Didim as per her family’s wishes. Because the land crossing between the West Bank and Jordan was closed Sunday after an attack on Israeli civilians, the ministry was trying to have the body flown to Turkey.

AP correspondent Charles de Ledesma reports Palestinians hold a funeral procession for a US-Turkish activist shot dead in the West Bank.

U.S. officials did not respond to a request for comment.

Jonathan Pollak, an Israeli peace activist who participated in Friday’s protest with Eygi, said she posed no threat when Israeli forces shot her. He said the killing happened during a period of calm after clashes between soldiers and Palestinian protesters.

Pollak said he saw two Israeli soldiers mount the roof of a nearby home, train a gun in the group’s direction and fire, with one of the bullets striking Eygi in the head.

The Israeli military says it is investigating what happened. On Saturday it said an “initial inquiry” found that security forces had been deployed to disperse a riot near the town of Beita involving Palestinian and Israeli civilians that “included mutual rock hurling.” The security forces had fired shots in the air, the military said.

Eygi’s family has called on the Biden administration to launch an independent investigation into the killing. The family’s statement was published by International Solidarity Movement, the organization Eygi was volunteering with at the time of her death.


The West Bank has seen a surge of violence since the Israel-Hamas wa r began in October, with increasing Israeli raids, attacks by Palestinian militants on Israelis, and attacks by Israeli settlers on Palestinians.

Flooding Kills More than 20 People in Morocco and Algeria

By SAM METZ

2:25 PM EDT, September 9, 2024

RABAT, Morocco (AP) — Torrential downpours hit North Africa’s normally arid mountains and deserts over the weekend, causing flooding that killed nearly two dozen people in Morocco and Algeria and destroyed homes and critical infrastructure.

In Morocco, officials said the two days of storms surpassed historic averages, in some cases exceeding the annual average rainfall. The downpours affected some of the regions that experienced a deadly earthquake one year ago.

Meteorologists had predicted that a rare deluge could strike North Africa’s Sahara Desert, where many areas receive less than an inch of rain a year.

Officials in Morocco said 18 people were killed in rural areas where infrastructure has historically been lacking, and 56 homes collapsed. Nine people were missing. Drinking water and electrical infrastructure were damaged, along with major roads.

Among the dead in the region, where many tourists go to enjoy desert landscapes, were foreigners from Canada and Peru.

Rachid El Khalfi, Morocco’s Interior Ministry spokesperson, said in a statement on Monday that the government was working to restore communication and access to flooded regions in the “exceptional situation” and urged people to use caution.

In neighboring Algeria, which held a presidential election over the weekend, authorities said at least five died in the country’s desert provinces. Interior Minister Brahim Merad called the situation “catastrophic” on state-owned television.

Algeria’s state-run news service APS said the government had sent thousands of civil protection and military officers to help with emergency response efforts and rescue families stuck in their homes. The floods also damaged bridges and trains.

At Least 4 Migrants Have Died and Others Remain Missing After a Boat Capsized off Senegal

By BABACAR DIONE and MARK BANCHEREAU

12:43 PM EDT, September 9, 2024

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — A boat carrying migrants capsized off the coast of Senegal over the weekend, leaving at least four people dead and several others missing, local authorities said on Monday.

The artisanal fishing boat left the town of Mbour, nearly 80 kilometers (50 miles) south of the capital, Dakar heading to Europe on Sunday afternoon before capsizing a few miles off the coast, Amadou Diop, the district’s prefect told The Associated Press.

Local fishermen rescued three people who were brought back to shore by naval authorities.

Senegal’s navy is looking for those missing, Diop said, adding that the exact number of passengers remained unknown.

In recent years, the number of migrants leaving West Africa through Senegal has surged with many fleeing conflict, poverty and the lack of job opportunities. Most head to the Canary Islands, a Spanish archipelago off the coast of West Africa, which is used as a stepping stone to continental Europe.

Since the beginning of the year, more than 22,300 people have landed on the Canary Islands, 126% more than the same period last year, according to statistics released by Spain’s Interior Ministry.

Last month, the Senegalese army said it had arrested 453 migrants and “members of smuggling networks” as part of a 12-day operation patrolling the coastline. More than half of the arrested were Senegalese nationals, the army said.

In July, a boat carrying 300 migrants, mostly from Gambia and Senegal, capsized off Mauritania. More than a dozen died and at least 150 others went missing.

The Atlantic route from West Africa to the Canary Islands is one of the deadliest in the world. While there is no accurate death toll because of the lack of information on departures from West Africa, the Spanish migrant rights group Walking Borders estimates the victims are in the thousands this year alone.

Migrant boats that get lost or run into problems often vanish in the Atlantic, with some drifting across the ocean for months until they are found in the Caribbean and Latin America carrying only human remains.

Kampala University Campus in Kenya Up for Sale over $15m Debt

Monday September 09 2024

Housing Finance Group head office in Nairobi.

By SAM KIPLAGAT

An auctioneer has put up for sale an educational complex in Kajiado County belonging to Kampala International University (KIU) to recover a debt of $15 million owed to mortgage lender Housing Finance.

Valley Auctioneers on Monday invited bids for the purchase of the complex that sits on a 61.3-acre parcel of land in Kisaju, approximately 1.5 kilometres off the Nairobi-Namanga Highway.

The incomplete educational complex comprises a four-storey administration block, five five-storey tuition blocks comprising five interconnected blocks, a four-storey library, two kitchen and dining blocks, a five-storey housing block and a hostel block.

The complex also has a five-storey guest house, a powerhouse, stores block, a security guard block, and a four-bedroom bungalow.

“All interested purchasers are requested to view and verify the details as the financiers/charges or the auctioneers do not warrant these,” Valley Auctioneers said in a newspaper notice, adding that the sale would be conducted on September 19.

KIU lost a bid to block the sale of the Kisaju property in April after the Supreme Court dismissed its second appeal in the loan dispute.

The university borrowed the loan in 2014 to develop its Kitengela campus but defaulted.  Buoyed by the success of its existing campuses, the university sought to expand into the Kenyan market and acquired the land to construct the Kitengela Campus at an estimated cost of $15 million.

The loan had a 9.5 percent compounded interest rate from January 2018—which means that KIU is required to repay an excess of $24million.

KIU first approached Housing Finance for the loan in 2010 and the deal was inked in 2014. The land was charged to the mortgage lender as security for the loan.

According to KIU, the bank disbursed a loan of $10 million in January 2014, but there was a delay in disbursing the balance of $5 million.

The university then sued for damages, among other demands and Housing Finance filed a counterclaim, which was upheld by the arbitrator, who ruled in favour of the lender in 2019.

A subsequent appeal to the High Court was dismissed by Justice Margaret Muigai, forcing KIU to head to the Court of Appeal, but suffered the same fate and, unsatisfied, the university escalated the matter to the Supreme Court.

In April, a bench of five judges of the Supreme Court dismissed the second appeal, saying there was no constitutional interpretation in the matter to allow the apex court to invoke its jurisdiction and determine the case.

"This court has consistently held that the mere claim by a party to the effect that its rights were violated by a superior court for whatever reason, does not bring the intended appeal within the purview of Article 163 (4) (a) of the Constitution," the Supreme Court said.   

The judges added that the appeal by KIU did not fall within any of the exceptions that would justify the court to assume jurisdiction and deal with the matter.

"In fact, we are satisfied that, by declining to grant leave to appeal in the circumstances of this case, the Court of Appeal was correctly guided by our decisions," Deputy Chief Justice Philomena Mwilu and Justices Mohammed Ibrahim, Smokin Wanjala, Njoki Ndung'u, and Isaac Lenaola said.

Ally Kibao, Abducted Tanzanian Opposition Leader Found Dead, Acid Poured on Face

Monday September 09 2024

Tanzania’s Chadema party chairman Freeman Mbowe. PHOTO | FILE

The body of a senior Tanzanian opposition official abducted from a bus by armed men was found on the outskirts of commercial capital Dar es Salaam with signs he had been beaten and acid had been poured on his face, his party said.

The killing of Ally Kibao, a member of the secretariat of the main opposition Chadema party, may taint the reformist image of President Samia Suluhu Hassan, who has tried to ease repression since succeeding John Magafuli, who died in office three years ago.

Kibao’s body was found on Saturday morning, a day after two armed men removed him from a bus travelling from Dar es Salaam to the north-eastern port city of Tanga, Chadema chairman Freeman Mbowe told journalists late on Sunday.

“The (preliminary) post-mortem has been done and it is obvious that Ally Kibao has been killed after being severely beaten and even having acid poured on his face,” Mr Mbowe said, adding that a full autopsy report would be completed on Monday.

President Hassan said she had ordered an investigation into what she described as Kibao’s assassination.

“Our country is democratic, and every citizen has the right to live. The government I lead does not tolerate such brutal acts,” she wrote on X on Sunday.

Police said in a statement they were investigating the “tragic incident”.

Mr Mbowe urged the President to form a judicial commission to investigate abductions and the killing of Kibao because, he said, police were among the suspects in the case.

Kibao’s death comes a month after police arrested and briefly detained more than 500 Chadema supporters, including their top leadership, as they attempted to gather for a meeting of the party's youth wing in the southwest of the country.

President Hassan has taken some steps to ease restrictions on the media and opposition since coming to power, but rights groups say arbitrary detentions have continued.

A Tanzanian Opposition Official is Found Dead with Signs of Beating and Acid Attack

By EVELYNE MUSAMBI

8:54 AM EDT, September 9, 2024

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Tanzania’s most prominent opposition party says an official who went missing last week has been found dead with signs of beatings and acid poured on his face.

President Samia Suluhu Hassan, who has loosened past restrictions on the opposition in the East African nation, quickly condemned the killing in a statement posted on X and said her administration does not condone such acts.

Armed men abducted Ali Kibao, a secretariat member of the CHADEMA party, from a bus traveling from the commercial hub of Dar es Salaam to the port city of Tanga, on Friday. His body was found on Saturday, opposition leader Freeman Mbowe said late Sunday.

Mbowe said an autopsy would be done on Monday and urged the president to form a commission to investigate Kibao’s death. The president in her statement said she has asked investigating agencies for an in-depth report.

The opposition wants an independent investigation.

“It is impossible for the same police who are the suspects to investigate this matter,” Mbowe told mourners on Monday.

Acid attacks are unusual in Tanzania, where some opposition figures in the past have been physically assaulted or even shot.

Mbowe and other opposition figures in recent days have been detained and released without charge as they planned a political rally — an act banned by the previous administration in Tanzania but later allowed by Hassan.

Tanzania is expected to hold its next presidential election next year.

47 Inmates Escape from a Prison in Liberia

1:51 PM EDT, September 9, 2024

MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) — Dozens of inmates escaped from a maximum security prison outside Liberia’s capital over the weekend, authorities said Monday.

The 47 inmates were able to escape because of a breach in the prison security system, the Justice Ministry said in a statement. The prison is in Kakata, a town 55 kilometers (34 miles) northeast of the capital, Monrovia.

The ministry said that it was “deeply concerned about this incident and is taking all necessary measures to ensure the recapture of the escaped inmates.”

The country’s national police have also deployed additional officers to assist in the search for the fugitives, the ministry said.

Prisons in Liberia are often severely overcrowded, and inmates lack access to enough food and basic medical care. Last year, a prison in Monrovia ran out of food, and two other prisons briefly stopped taking inmates because of food shortages.

A large number of inmates are also detained without a trial. In November 2022, a U.N. report found that 73% of the nationwide prison population were pretrial detainees.

Fuel Tanker Collision in Nigeria Caused an Explosion that Killed at Least 48 People

By DYEPKAZAH SHIBAYAN

3:05 PM EDT, September 8, 2024

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — A fuel tanker collided head-on with another truck in Nigeria on Sunday causing an explosion that killed at least 48 people, the country’s emergency response agency said.

The fuel tanker was also carrying cattle in the Agaie area in north-central Niger state and at least 50 of them were burned alive, Abdullahi Baba-Arab, director-general of the Niger State Emergency Management Agency, said.

Search and rescue operations were underway at the scene of the accident, Baba-Arab said.

Baba-Arab said initially that 30 bodies were found but in a later statement said an additional 18 bodies of victims who were burned to death in the collision were found. He said the dead had been given a mass burial.

Mohammed Bago, governor of Niger state, said residents of the affected area should remain calm and asked road users to “always be cautious and abide by road traffic regulations to safeguard lives and property.”

With the absence of an efficient railway system to transport cargo, fatal truck accidents are common along most of the major roads in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country.

In 2020 alone, there were 1,531 gasoline tanker crashes resulting in 535 fatalities and 1,142 injuries, according to Nigeria’s Federal Road Safety Corps.

Sunday, September 08, 2024

Algeria Declares President Tebboune Election Winner with 95pc of Vote

Sunday September 08 2024

Algerian authorities declared President Abdulmadjid Tebboune the overwhelming winner of Saturday's election on Sunday, but a rival candidate alleged irregularities in the count and fewer than half of registered voters cast ballots.

Official preliminary results gave Tebboune 95 percent of the vote, enough to avoid a second-round run-off, with Abdelaali Hassani Cherif getting 3 percent and Youcef Aouchiche 2 percent. Turnout was 48 percent.

Tebboune, backed by the military, was facing only nominal opposition from Hassani Cherif, a moderate Islamist, and Aouchiche, a moderate secularist, both running with the blessing of Algeria's powerful establishment.

Hassani Cherif's campaign said polling station officials had been pressured to inflate results and alleged failures to deliver vote-sorting records to candidates' representatives, as well as instances of proxy group voting.

"This is a farce," said Hassani Cherif's spokesperson Ahmed Sadok, adding that the candidate had won far more votes than had been announced, citing the campaign's own tallies from regions. Reuters could not immediately verify those tallies or reach Tebboune's or Aouchiche's campaign for comment.

Abdelaali Hassani Cherif, leader of the moderate Islamist Movement of the Society for Peace (MSP) and presidential candidate, gestures as he casts his vote at a polling station during the presidential election in Algiers, Algeria on September 7, 2024. PHOTO | REUTERS

However, electoral commission head Mohammed Charfi said when announcing the results that the body had worked to ensure transparency and fair competition among all candidates.

Tebboune's re-election means Algeria will likely keep on with a governing programme that has resumed lavish social spending based on increased energy revenues after he came into office in 2019 following a period of lower oil prices.

He has promised to raise unemployment benefits, pensions and public housing programmes, all of which he increased during his first term as president.

"As long as Tebboune continues to raise wages and pensions and maintain subsidies he will be the best in my eyes," said Ali, a cafe customer in the Ouled Fayet district of Algiers, asking not to write his family name.

First elected during the mass "hirak" (movement) protests that forced his veteran predecessor Abdulaziz Bouteflika from power after 20 years, Tebboune has backed a tough approach from the security forces, which have jailed prominent dissidents.

His election in 2019 reflected the anti-establishment mood in Algeria that year, with turnout of 40 percent, far below previous votes.

The protests, which brought hundreds of thousands of people onto the streets every week for more than a year demanding an end to corruption and the ousting of the ruling elite, were finally curtailed by the Covid pandemic.

"Turnout is very low. It shows that the vast majority is like me," said another Ouled Fayet resident, Slimane, 24, who also asked not to give his family name. He did not vote because he does not trust politicians, he said.

Unemployment benefits

Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022 boosted European demand for Algerian gas and pushed energy prices back up, increasing Algerian state revenue after years of burning through foreign exchange reserves and leading to new hydrocarbons projects.

While using much of the money for social handouts, Tebboune's government has also pushed economic reforms aimed at strengthening the private sector to create jobs.

However, while unemployment is down from its highs of around 14 percent during the pandemic, it remained above 12 percent last year and inflation is also high.

The economic difficulties faced by ordinary Algerians may have contributed to the low turnout on Saturday.

"Turnout at 48 percent versus 40 percent in 2019 clearly shows that the gap between rulers and the people is still to be filled," said political analyst Farid Ferrari.

In foreign policy, Tebboune's record is patchy.

Despite Algeria's key role in Europe as a gas provider, arch regional rival Morocco has succeeded in winning over Spanish and French acceptance of its sovereignty over Western Sahara, where Algiers backs the Polisario separatists. Morocco has won over some African and Arab states too.

Meanwhile, Algeria's push for membership of the Brics group when it expanded in January was thwarted, with the bloc instead inviting Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates to join. Algeria instead joined the Brics development bank last month.

Its efforts to bring greater stability in Africa's Sahel region also ran adrift, with an attempt to mediate between rival forces in Niger following a coup last year failing to deliver progress.

However, Algeria remains a major military power in the region and seems unlikely to shift from its traditional stance balancing ties between Western powers and Russia.

Somalia Pins Corporates Over Independent Somaliland Label

Sunday September 08 2024

A member of the ground crew directs an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner plane at the Bole International Airport in Ethiopia's capital Addis Ababa on August 21, 2015.

By ABDULKADIR KHALIF

Somalia says it will make good its threat of punishing corporate bodies labelling or operating as though Somaliland is independent territory.

Mogadishu had said all firms with operations in Somalia should, by September 1, have altered information on their network platforms to reflect that Somaliland was a part of Somalia.

Somalia’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry (MoCI) referred to the country’s provisional constitution to order companies to slash the name of Somaliland, the self-declared independent territory, from their network information sites.

Money transfer agencies such as Paysii, Dahabshil and Jubba Express were specifically named in that communique that was also meant to draw the attention of other remittance dealers and companies to stop using the name of Somaliland instead apply Somalia, giving deadline.

Ethiopian Airlines which flies to Hargeisa and Mogadishu was also fingered after it had labelled the Somaliland destination as a separate country.

“Use Somalia only in your systems as from 1st of September (this year),” Commerce and Industry Minister Jibril Abdirashid Haji Abdi had said on August 24.

The Somali Civil Aviation Authority (SCAA) had also directed airlines using Somali airports to stop referring cities such as Hargeisa, the capital of Somaliland territory, as different from Somalia.

The matter though is reflective of the events since January 2 this year when Ethiopia and Somaliland inked an MoU that could grant Addis Ababa a coastal strip to build a naval base ostensibly in return for recognising Somaliland, which has fought for recognition since 1991 without success.

That MoU irked Mogadishu, which has gone on to protest at every global forum, accusing Ethiopia of plotting to dismember Somalia.

Somaliland, however, insists that Mogadishu has refused to recognise the real problem.

Ismail Shirwac, First Secretary at the Somaliland Liaison Mission in Nairobi, said Somalia shouldn’t be picking a quarrel with Ethiopia, but address the concerns of Somaliland.

“The core of the matter lies in Somaliland exercising its sovereign right to enter into international agreements, as we did with the UAE's DP World, while Somalia continues to assert that Somaliland is part of Somalia and, therefore, cannot engage in such agreements independently,” he told Shirwac told The EastAfrican on Thursday, referring to a past port deal Somaliland entered with Emirati logistics firm DP World, but which Somalia rejected.

“As long as Somalia disregards the reality of Somaliland's sovereignty, it risks further isolating itself on the global stage.”

Regionally, Somalia has often reacted fast when countries tried to deal with Somaliland as independent. Somalia cut diplomatic ties with Kenya in December 2020, accusing Nairobi of interfering with Mogadishu’s internal affairs after it hosted Somaliland leader in Nairobi. It resumed relations six months later.

It had, in 2019, also cut ties with Guinea after it gave Somaliland leader Muse Bihi a red-carpet reception.

While no sovereign state has formally recognised Somaliland, Shirwac said Somaliland continue to engage with the international community and “to form strategic partnerships.”

“It is in the interest of the entire region for Somalia to recognize the sovereignty and independence of Somaliland.”

Those partnerships may now face a test. Ethiopian Airlines and Flydubai were specifically warned their landing rights could be revoked if they didn’t change. Ethiopian Airlines came into controversy after it showed Hargeisa without the name of the country while Flydubai described it as located in Somaliland.

Earlier this year, some airlines complained of receiving contradictory navigation instructions from air traffic controllers in Somalia and Somaliland, risking safety of passengers. Internationally, only one Somali airspace is recognised, however.

Both airlines stopped referring Hargeisa and other landing sites in the region as Somaliland and applied Somalia as instructed.

But it came after Ethiopian’s request for a longer timeline was refused.

“Given the available technological capabilities, we believe the necessary corrections should not take more than two days,” SCAA said.

Nonetheless, the issue raised strong reaction from leaders in Somaliland authority.

Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi Irro, a politician seeking to unseat Bihi in the next elections labelled the Somali government’s order as a ‘blatant aggression.’

“The government in Somalia has recently been orchestrating attack on the people, internally and externally, displaying hate and violence,” Irro said this week.

Khadar Hussein Abdi, the Secretary General of opposition Wadani Party, argued the push by Somalia will galvanise Somaliland.

“Somaliland did not emerge from expression of words and written papers, but from blood spilled,” he said, invoking Somaliland’s reasons to break away after the region was bombed by the Siad Barre regime in the late 1980s civil war.

Somaliland has often depicted Somalia as a failed state and Bihi said the same last month when Egypt sent arms to Somalia to support local forces against al-Shabaab, but which irked Ethiopia.

“President Hassan (Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud) who cannot even secure his own palace in Mogadishu without foreign troops, is issuing directives to force planes landing in our territory and banks from operating under our name to change,” stated Bihi at a public gathering in Hargeisa on August 26.

“Somalia's efforts to undermine Somaliland’s independence are ineffective. These directives will not change the reality on the ground and our status.”

Somaliland, once known as British Somaliland Protectorate attained independence from UK on 26 June 1960 and voluntarily merged with Italian Somaliland to form the Somali Republic on 1st July 1960.

Since the territory unilaterally reclaimed independence on 18th of May 1991, following the collapse of Siad Barre’s regime, it enjoyed a de facto self-rule with a functioning democracy, having own central bank and a separate currency.

For now, corporates have weighed business gains or losses. Ethiopian, for instance, faced the grim reality of losing business in Somalia, including 6 fight destinations and two daily flights to Mogadishu.

Money remittance companies and other entities cleared their issue via the Somali Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI) which said it “stands for the advocacy on matters affecting investors, manufactures and traders.”

Additional Reporting by Aggrey Mutambo

Luxury to Wealth: How Johann Rupert Topped the Continent

Saturday September 07 2024

South African billionaire Johann Rupert. PHOTO | POOL

By PETER DUBE

Johann Rupert, a name synonymous with luxury and business acumen, has cemented his position as the driving force among Africa's wealthiest. And with a net worth that dwarfs most, Rupert's influence extends far beyond the borders of his native South Africa.

The South African billionaire has lately surpassed Nigerian industrialist Aliko Dangote to claim the coveted title of Africa's richest person.

According to the latest data from the Bloomberg Billionaires Index as of August 29, 2024, Rupert's net worth has surged to a staggering $14.3 billion, a remarkable increase of $1.9 billion, securing his position at 147th globally in the wealth rankings.

This surge has propelled him 12 places ahead of Mr Dangote, whose fortune has dipped to $13.4 billion, marking a significant decrease of $1.7 billion this year. The shift in rankings reflects the remarkable success of Rupert's luxury goods conglomerate, Richemont, based in Switzerland.

Renowned for its prestigious brands such as Cartier and Montblanc, Richemont's strong performance has been a driving force behind Rupert's unprecedented rise to the top of Africa's wealth charts. In stark contrast, Dangote's wealth decline is closely tied to Nigeria's challenging economic conditions and the devaluation of the Naira.

The Nigerian billionaire's financial setbacks underscore the difficulties faced by his conglomerate, especially in light of production delays at his refinery and supply chain disruptions.

Rupert's achievements extend far beyond his financial success. He has been the highest individual taxpayer in South Africa for the past two decades, underscoring his significant contribution to the country's economy. His generous philanthropic efforts, prominently his extensive support for educational and environmental initiatives, have left an indelible mark on South Africa.

The Rupert family's dedication to these causes through organisations such as the Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund and the SA College for Tourism demonstrates their commitment to uplifting their community.

Moreover, Rupert's commitment to philanthropy is exemplified in his practice of donating all the wages earned from his various board memberships to multiple charities, a testament to his altruistic spirit, as stated by Forbes.

This extraordinary rise to the top of Africa's wealth rankings not only underscores the dynamic nature of the continent's economic landscape but also highlights the significant role of philanthropy and social responsibility among its leading figures.

Rupert's unparalleled success and dedication to social impact serve as an inspiration to entrepreneurs and philanthropists alike, setting a high standard for business leaders across the continent. Born in Johannesburg in 1950, Rupert's business journey began with his father, Anton Rupert, who founded Rembrandt Group, a tobacco and liquor conglomerate.

Under Johann's leadership, Rembrandt Group expanded and diversified into luxury goods, eventually becoming Richemont.

Today, Richemont's portfolio includes iconic brands like Cartier, Montblanc, and Vacheron Constantin. Johann Rupert attended the University of Stellenbosch to study economics.

However, he interrupted his studies in 1984 to join his father's business venture. Rupert has been a vocal advocate for political and environmental issues in South Africa, actively campaigning against white-minority rule. His contributions to business have been recognised with numerous awards.

The billionaire resides in Cape Town, where he owns a luxurious mansion. Additionally, he has properties in Geneva and London. In addition, he is the chairman of Remgro Limited, a Stellenbosch-based company, which indirectly controls eNCA, one of the biggest News Television channels in Africa.

The company invests in industrial mining and financial services. Remgro Media Investments, an investment arm of Remgro Limited, holds an 81 percent stake in eMedia, the parent company of eNCA.

This effectively places eNCA under Rupert's ownership.

Rupert’s company also owns a top-division South African football club, Stellenbosch FC. In the broader landscape of Africa's wealthiest individuals, South African billionaire Nicky Oppenheimer holds the third position with a net worth of approximately $11.6 billion.

He is followed by Egyptian businessman Nassef Sawiris with $9.5 billion and South African investor Natie Kirsh with $9.2 billion.

Indonesia Woos Africa Using ‘Big Boys’ Script

Friday September 06 2024

A general view of the skyline of Jakarta, Indonesia on February 28, 2024. Shutterstock

By LUKE ANAMI

By APOLINARI TAIRO

Indonesia this week hosted a gathering of African leaders in Bali, trying its luck and following the script of the big boys such as China.

But the timing was poor, either by design or default, and saw fewer African heads of state and government attend, as more than 50 of them attended a similar but bigger forum in China.

The 2nd Indonesia-Africa Forum (IAF) 2024 meeting ended on Tuesday, September 3. Rwandan President Paul Kagame was the most notable attendee from the East African Community. Tanzania was represented by Zanzibar president Dr Hussein Mwinyi, while Kenya sent Energy and Petroleum Cabinet Secretary Opiyo Wandayi. 

Kagame would later also attend the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (Focac) in Beijing. Other key leaders Bali included Liberian President Joseph Boakai, Nana Akufo-Addo of Ghana, eSwatini Prime Minister Cleopas Dlamini, and Zimbabwe Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga.

Indonesia, not normally among the ‘big boys’ club of China, US, India, UK, France, Turkey, South Korea or Russia, has been trying to get a slice of business from Africa using the old tools of aid, security cooperation, business, and Africa summits. 

In 2019, it established the Indonesia Agency for International Development (LDKPI), also known as Indonesia Aid. It says its development cooperation has expanded to 23 of 54 countries in Africa or 42 percent of the countries in the region since then.

In June, Rwanda and Indonesia signed an MoU on political consultation, coming in the wake of intensified security cooperation. The two countries had been discussing cooperation between Indonesia and Rwanda National Police on combating transnational organised crime and enhancing capacity building, according to a dispatch from both sides.

The latest forum targeted the ‘Bandung Spirit for Africa’s Agenda 2063,’ combining the famous South-South discussions with Africa’s ambition to prosper.

“The forum focused on issues related to energy, health, food resilience and mining, with over 1,500 delegates drawn from African and Global South countries,” Mr Wandayi said.

“I engaged in productive bilateral discussions within the framework of accelerating development of the Suswa Geothermal Project with representatives drawn from Kemenlu I, PT Pertamina Geothermal Energy and other partners in Indonesia,” he said.

In Bali, a cooperation agreement was signed between Kenya BioVax Institute, a state-owned vaccine manufacturing company, and PT Bio Farma, the Indonesian state-owned vaccines manufacturer. 

Mr Wandayi said that the deal will provide the framework for technology transfer for human vaccines as well as workforce development in bio manufacturing as well as technical cooperation between the two countries.

Overall, Indonesia said it successfully recorded 32 business partnerships with a value of more than $3.5 billion in business deals from the summit, where at least 29 states sent representatives. 

Timelines on implementation were not immediately given, but Indonesians were marketing theirs as a country of honest dealings.

"Indonesia is increasingly recognised internationally as a reliable development partner for developing countries, a reliable southern provider," said Siti Nugraha Mauludiah, Director-General of Information and Public Diplomacy at Indonesia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

In food security, Indonesia has provided support for the procurement of food supplies to address the impact of drought disasters in Kenya, Ethiopia, and Madagascar, according to a brochure shared on Tuesday.

Additionally, a programme for revitalising agricultural training centres has been carried out in The Gambia and Tanzania.

Indonesia concluded an investment agreement in the energy sector with a total investment value of $1.5 billion at the forum.

“This is certainly a promising achievement from the target of the AIF 2024 deliverables agreement worth $3.5 billion," said Dewi Justicia Meidiwaty, Director for African Affairs, Directorate General of Asian, Pacific and African Affairs of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Indonesia’s PT Essa Industries signed MoUs with Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC), Tanzania Fertiliser Regulatory Authority (TFRA) and Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC).

Indonesian entities plan to establish a fertiliser plant in Tanzania worth $1.2 billion, according to a dispatch.

Tanzanian Deputy Minister for Planning and Investment Stanslaus Nyongo said in July the two countries had agreed to cooperate in key investments mostly in minerals and renewable energy through exploration and capacity building.

Tanzania’s Electric Supply Company and Persero of Indonesia inked a deal on cooperation geothermal power production.

Indonesia is currently funding long and short training for Tanzanians through exchange programmes in medical science, engineering, fisheries, tourism, fish farming, agriculture and information communication technology, “in line with the efforts of the two countries to support food security in the future," according to Meidiwaty.