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Published 27th August 2020

Vol 61 No 17


Mali

The junta haggles on transition

Kati, 19 August 2020. (Pic: Habib Kouyate/Xinhua News Agency/PA Images)
Kati, 19 August 2020. (Pic: Habib Kouyate/Xinhua News Agency/PA Images)

The colonels face down the demands of regional leaders while the West wants to get back to fighting the jihadists. Keïta is all but forgotten

It's been a week of hard bargaining in Bamako and over the West African airwaves as the putschists who turfed Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta out of the presidency negotiate with the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) over the shape of a transition to take the country through to fresh democratic elections. In command of the capital, the state machine and popular support, the colonels of the Comité National pour le Salut du Peuple (CNSP) stuck firmly to their bottom line: no comeback for IBK. He has now conceded, and told Ecowas mediators he has no wish to return to office.

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Inside the state capture project

A recorded telephone released on social media exposes the extent of Kuda Tagwirei's business empire and its ties to the presidency

If the leaked audio recording of his telephone call with ruling party acolyte Temba Mliswa is any guide, businessman Kudakwashe Tagwirei's role in government is stronger than ever...


Time to re-open

Dr Stanley Okolo. Pic: WAHO
Dr Stanley Okolo. Pic: WAHO

Africa’s lockdown era is nearing the end as policy-makers focus on how to live with Covid-19 rather than defeat it

The shadow-boxing over Covid-19 in Africa appears to be over. While retaining measures to protect public health wherever possible, the priority is now shifting to opening up economies...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

Nigeria was taking no chances in its campaign to ensure that its former agriculture minister Akinwumi Adesina gets another term as President of the African Development Bank. Adesina is the sole candidate in the AfDB's elections on 27 August; the rules stipulate he must get a double majority.

However, voting rights are tied to the percentage of paid-in capital on the day of the election. Between 31 March and 31 July, Nigeria almost doubled its voting rights to 16.8% of the African bloc...

Nigeria was taking no chances in its campaign to ensure that its former agriculture minister Akinwumi Adesina gets another term as President of the African Development Bank. Adesina is the sole candidate in the AfDB's elections on 27 August; the rules stipulate he must get a double majority.

However, voting rights are tied to the percentage of paid-in capital on the day of the election. Between 31 March and 31 July, Nigeria almost doubled its voting rights to 16.8% of the African bloc, making it all but impossible for countries on the continent to abstain and deny him a majority.

Many are uneasy about governance in the Bank although an external review panel led by Ireland's former President Mary Robinson backed a decision by the AfDB's Ethics Committee to exonerate Adesina of all complaints of favouritism and malfeasance made by a group of Bank staffers in January. This week the whistle blowers who made those complaints released another 50-page document requesting the issues, as well as the internal processes, be independently investigated. For now, Adesina's problems will be financial.

Despite securing a doubling of the bank's capital last year, many of the shareholders, including the non-Africans, will struggle to pay in their capital. Shortfalls will be picked up the ratings agencies and Bank's treasured triple-A rating will be in question. That could mean a scaling down of Adesina's ambitious plans to help finance Africa's recovery after the pandemic recession.

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Timipre Sylva's meeting with Nyesom Wike at the governor's mansion in Port Harcourt on 23 August bore all the signs of an old friends' reunion. Both are political...


No road back for Keïta

Mutinous soldiers have delivered the coup de grâce to a failing regime as envoys go through the motions of trying to restore the president

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A trade deal between Nairobi and Washington appears to make political and economic sense for both sides but critics see dangers for Kenyatta

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The public health emergency and the economic meltdown are deepening the dependence of South Africa's neighbours on the region's dominant power

Trying to manage the biggest Covid-19 outbreak in Africa as well as rebuilding the economy and institutions after the disastrous presidency of Jacob Zuma add up to South...



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