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Published 19th November 2020

Vol 61 No 23


Ethiopia

Hard choices ahead in Addis

Copyright © Africa Confidential 2020
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2020

The Prime Minister's attack on Tigray and his push for a unitary state raises concerns about political autonomy in other regions

It is the beginning of the end, insisted Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on 17 November as federal forces started marching on Mekelle, the regional capital of Tigray. The previous day, Abiy's government had announced the end of a three-day amnesty for Tigrayan special forces and militia to surrender. Around that deadline, the federal airforce launched fresh bombing raids on Mekelle and other towns and military positions.

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Risks on all fronts

Copyright © Africa Confidential 2020
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2020

The Prime Minister’s stonewalling of peace overtures is winning him few friends as disputes beyond Tigray are confronting Addis

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has been steadfast in rejecting widespread calls for negotiations since fighting broke out with Tigray on 4 November, ignoring appeals from the United Nations,...


Ace arrest boosts Cyril

Ace Magashule. Pic: Instagram
Ace Magashule. Pic: Instagram

The pro-Zuma ANC leader is standing his ground in the face of corruption charges, but his position weakens as pressure mounts

The 10 November arrest of the second most powerful politician in the ruling African National Congress on charges of corruption, following more than 100 graft-related arrests in recent...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

Zambia ran out of road on 13 November when its debt negotiations hit an impasse and it became the first African country to default since the Covid-19 pandemic hit the continent's economies. The crisis could also force a more coordinated response from the G20, the Paris Club of official creditors and commercial lenders. On 20 November, the G20 finance ministers are to meet to produce a more considered plan.

Zambia's case with US$12 billion of debt is particular and complex at the sa...

Zambia ran out of road on 13 November when its debt negotiations hit an impasse and it became the first African country to default since the Covid-19 pandemic hit the continent's economies. The crisis could also force a more coordinated response from the G20, the Paris Club of official creditors and commercial lenders. On 20 November, the G20 finance ministers are to meet to produce a more considered plan.

Zambia's case with US$12 billion of debt is particular and complex at the same time. Well before the pandemic, President Edgar Lungu's government was heading for an economic crash. The desperate secrecy surrounding its borrowings from China's development banks and commercial companies was a symptom of a wider malaise. It makes resolving the crisis far more difficult, pitting one set of creditors against another.

Zambia framed its request for an interest freeze as part of the G20's Debt Service Suspension Initiative, arguing that it was making the same demand of all its foreign creditors, including private lenders. Holders of Zambia's $3bn of Eurobonds think otherwise. They suspect the government wants to pay all its arrears to China's lenders before the start of more general debt restructuring talks. Equally, Chinese lenders don't want any debt relief they offer to be used to benefit wealthy lenders in Europe and the United States. It's a messy mix of geopolitics and commercial calculation. The core elements to support serious negotiations – transparency and a credible national recovery plan – are not on the table.

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Gunfight ends 30-year calm

Polisario's efforts to stymie Morocco's growing trans-African trade may have yielded more results than decades of talk

While Morocco was congratulating itself on persuading an emerging regional power, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), to open a consulate in El Ayoun (known to Moroccans as Laâyoune),...


Mounting protests face police violence

Young activists are demonstrating against rocketing prices, worsening unemployment  and double-standards on corruption

President João Lourenço faces deepening public anger over the country's economic implosion and accusations that his anti-corruption campaign is replacing one set of dishonest officials with another.


A divisive plan for unity

A new report is supposed to be the blueprint for sweeping reforms but it has deepened the split between the president and his deputy

Three years after President Uhuru Kenyatta won re-election in polls boycotted by opposition leader Raila Odinga, the two erstwhile rivals sat on a red-carpeted podium at the Bomas...


Fears mount of all-out civil war

Talks are spurned and both sides dig in as federal forces take on Tigray's regional government

With air strikes and more troops, on 8 November Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed stepped up the federal government's campaign to drive the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) from...


Competing on competence

The opposition struggles to persuade voters that it could handle the economy, but the administration is floundering too

With just weeks to go until presidential elections on 7 December National Democratic Congress (NDC) candidate, former president John Dramani Mahama, is still struggling to alter public perceptions...


Stress test for the Tonse Alliance

The ruling coalition parties are fighting each other in by-elections amid the challenges of turning a new page in a time of austerity

Campaigning for the by-election in the northern seat of Karonga Central on Tuesday 10 November has been exposing the widening cracks in the ruling coalition, especially between the...



Pointers

Too low, says Mo

African governance is in decline and Covid-19 is likely to make it worse, according to The Mo Ibrahim Foundation's 2020 Index of African Governance published on 17 November.*...

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Shooting and fishing

Relations between neighbours Botswana and Namibia have hit a new low following the shooting dead of four Namibians by the Botswana army along the Chobe river frontier on...


By-election bust-up

President Lazarus Chakwera's Malawi Congress Party won a narrow victory over its coalition partner, the United Transformation Movement, in the bitterly contested Karonga Central by-election on 10 November....