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Published 16th February 2023

Vol 64 No 4


Nigeria

The naira republic's banknote crisis hurts (almost) everyone

Bola Tinubu. Pic: Emmanuel Osodi/Majority World CIC/Alamy
Bola Tinubu. Pic: Emmanuel Osodi/Majority World CIC/Alamy

Campaigners for the ruling party's presidential candidate accuse the central bank of sabotage days ahead of the election

A desperate scarcity of banknotes and fuel are adding a final note of drama to what looks like the most open election ever in Nigeria. Whatever the merits of his eight-year rule, President Muhammadu Buhari had seemed emotionally disengaged from the election and unconcerned about whether his All Progressives Congress (APC) and its presidential candidate Bola Ahmed Tinubu emerge victorious.

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Shell takes hard line on oil-spill case

Pic: anankkml / stock.adobe.com
Pic: anankkml / stock.adobe.com

The latest round of litigation on pollution in the Niger Delta sees Shell digging in its heels and denying any legal responsibility

The London-based law firm Leigh Day is pushing ahead with a case in the London High Court on behalf of members of the Ogale and Bille communities in...


How the Wellega war threatens Abiy

Pic: Eric Lafforgue/Alamy
Pic: Eric Lafforgue/Alamy

After the peace accord with Tigray, rivalries between the biggest regional blocs in the ruling party trigger more turmoil

So far, the peace agreement between the federal government and the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) in Pretoria on 2 November has stopped the fighting in a war...



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THE INSIDE VIEW

African leaders face a newish challenge as they gather for the African Union's summit from 17-20 February in Addis Ababa. Amid geopolitical rivalries, the continent is in demand, thanks to its reserves of resources needed for the green energy transition and its growing demographic weight.

Since January, a stream of high-level emissaries from Beijing, Moscow, Washington, and Brussels have launched pan-African diplomatic tours. Their offers differ markedly: the common claim is their res...

African leaders face a newish challenge as they gather for the African Union's summit from 17-20 February in Addis Ababa. Amid geopolitical rivalries, the continent is in demand, thanks to its reserves of resources needed for the green energy transition and its growing demographic weight.

Since January, a stream of high-level emissaries from Beijing, Moscow, Washington, and Brussels have launched pan-African diplomatic tours. Their offers differ markedly: the common claim is their respect for African sovereignty, and not forcing leaders to pick sides.

China measures its influence by its position as Africa's biggest single trading partner and its infrastructure investment. The EU proffers an uneasy combination of migration control, investment and conditional aid. Russia, despite offering the least investment, is winning influence via arms sales, security agreements and military aid, most recently via the Wagner mercenary group. The United States offer is of some US$55 billion in aid over the next three years (despite some double counting) and at least $15bn of investment deals inked at the US-African leaders' summit last December.

Less clear is whether the AU can coordinate a united response to this onslaught of interest. The AU welcomes invitations to join the G20 and the UN Security Council but it has failed so far to secure substantive agreements to alleviate the region's debt crises and capital shortages.

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Hargeisa's bloody own goal

Somaliland's military assault on Las Anod looks like an over-reaction by the state government and could scupper its independence ambitions

After Hargeisa's security forces reacted to peaceful protests in Las Anod in December and January by shooting marchers dead, some thought the situation would calm – but the...


Anti-corruption furore goes global

Law officers are determined to obstruct fraudbuster Martha Chizuma's investigations as foreign envoys sound a warning

The government has launched a war of attrition against the courts as it tries to stop Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) Director-General Martha Chizuma from investigating top politicians and their...


Kaka falls back on authoritarianism

The President has abandoned the trappings of 'transition' and is consolidating his rule for the long run

Many of the efforts to broaden the support base of the regime of President Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno (aka Mahamat 'Kaka') during last year's reconciliation exercise included genuine...


Ramaphosa shuffles the reshuffle

The coming cabinet changes will show whether the President is ready to use his new political authority

After spending his first term fending off a rebellion from supporters of ousted President Jacob Zuma, President Cyril Ramaphosa should now be able to sack all those ministers...


Restive Tuareg ramp up tension

The Algiers peace accord is in danger of unravelling as both Mali and Burkina Faso struggle under new challenges from the jihadists

While Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea talk of grand plans for diplomatic and economic cooperation, the already desperate Sahel security crisis has taken another turn for the worse.


Qatargate fuels Rabat's schism with Euro MPs

Relations between the European Parliament and Morocco are nosediving, jeopardising agreements on trade, energy and migration

The fall-out from the Qatargate scandal is tarnishing both the European Parliament, the European Union's legislature, and Morocco's security services. It will also complicate efforts by the European...



Pointers

Flying on empty

Uganda Airlines wants to buy six new mid-range airliners costing nearly US$500 million despite losing $146m since its re-launch in August 2019. The aviation trade press reported that...


Fortress Europe

EU leaders adopted their toughest stance yet on migration at the special summit in Brussels on 9-10 February, threatening to suspend aid, tariff-free trade and visa access to...