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Published 9th July 2020

Vol 61 No 14


Nigeria

At cross purposes on world trade

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. Pic: UN Photo/Ariana Lindquist
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. Pic: UN Photo/Ariana Lindquist

Abuja's support for Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as next head of the WTO faces unforced errors and political hurdles

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Abuja's candidate and emerging front-runner for the top post at the World Trade Organisation, faces tough questions about her campaign's use of lobbyists who advocate for Biafran independence and accuse President Muhammadu Buhari's government of state-sponsored genocide.


Divided we stand

Muhammadu Buhari. Pic: Mikhail Metzel/Tass/PA Images
Muhammadu Buhari. Pic: Mikhail Metzel/Tass/PA Images

President Buhari has papered over rifts in the ruling party but they will re-emerge ahead of national elections

With the Covid-19 pandemic spreading and the economy on the slide, the country's top politicians have taken refuge in the familiarity of an old-fashioned internal power struggle. R...


The pride of lions

Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam. Pic: Gioia Forster/DPA/PA Images
Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam. Pic: Gioia Forster/DPA/PA Images

The obstacles to agreement over managing the Blue Nile dam are more about internal politics than technical issues

The positions of Egypt and Ethiopia over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam seemed as far apart as their respective capital cities as officials began another round of video-confer...

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BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

In a bid to grab attention amid the global pandemic, the Islamist insurgents in the Cabo Delgado province of northern Mozambique are edging towards the site of the country's planned giant gas export plant, Africa's biggest investment project. The latest attack, an ambush, killed eight people in a truck owned by Fenix construction services working alongside France's Total, which is arranging some $16 billion of financing for the gas project. Total's section of the project, some 40 kilometres o...

In a bid to grab attention amid the global pandemic, the Islamist insurgents in the Cabo Delgado province of northern Mozambique are edging towards the site of the country's planned giant gas export plant, Africa's biggest investment project. The latest attack, an ambush, killed eight people in a truck owned by Fenix construction services working alongside France's Total, which is arranging some $16 billion of financing for the gas project. Total's section of the project, some 40 kilometres out to sea, will be easier to defend in the longer run.

Like others, this attack has been claimed by Islamic State Central African Province but is the first to target oil and gas industry contractors, and will ramp up pressure on President Filipe Nyusi's government. Nysusi hails from this region himself. It will draw more political attention. The crisis was due for discussion at the next SADC regional summit in September but that may be too long to wait.

Nyusi has downplayed the crisis, hiring the Dyck Advisory Group, a private security firm, despite South Africa, the United States and Portugal all offering military support. Nyusi's officials are yet to engage marginalised groups in Cabo Delgado and neighbouring areas, where there are multiple grievances against the Maputo government that are the basis of the insurgency. Activists say there can be no solely military solution and the government's current strategy risks playing into the insurgents' hands and ignoring legitimate complaints from local communities.

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A big tent for Moi's children

The President's attempts to co-opt oppositionists has reunited young Turks promoted by the late President Moi

Thirty years after the Saba Saba protests triggered the battle for the restoration of multiparty politics in Kenya, veterans of that struggle might be troubled to see that the curr...


Lazarus rising

Political pluralism gets a boost as the President balances the demands of voters with those of his broad coalition

While former President Peter Mutharika finally packed his bags and sought solace at an official government holiday residence on Lake Malawi, newly elected President Lazarus Chakwer...

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Magufuli wants a mega-dam

Experts say solar power is a better bet than projects like the Stiegler's Gorge dam, which has got the go-ahead in spite of conservationist concern

Plans to build a dam across the Rufiji River at Stiegler's Gorge pre-date Tanzania's independence, but no public or private finance could be found for the venture until 2018, when ...


Keïta clings on

A deal that could end the deadlock that has brought thousands to the streets demanding the President’s resignation is edging closer

News that on 5 July the beleaguered head of state President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta (IBK) had held talks with Mahmoud Dicko, the conservative imam whose mass mobilising appeal has g...


Pandemic mysteries multiply

Scientists are baffled by countries’ varied experiences of the pandemic but agree on the risk that drugs shortages pose to people living with HIV

Across Africa, lockdowns are loosening even as Covid-19 continues its inexorable journey across the continent. As Johannesburg, Cairo and Lagos feel the heat, other cities and coun...


Doubts over post-slump bounce

Financial institutions share a baleful view of the pandemic’s damage to Africa’s economies, some doubling their estimates for lost growth

Economists in the international financial institutions have been updating their assessments of the damage the lockdown and pandemic are having on African economies on a weekly basi...


Showdown to follow lockdown

As an ANC faction moves to reinstate provincial officials and delay economic reforms, Ramaphosa’s credibility is on the line

As South Africa continues to ease its Covid-19 lockdown, President Cyril Ramaphosa faces a country teetering on the brink of bankruptcy, a ruling party more divided than ever, and...



Pointers

Media denied oxygen

The government campaign against press freedom has gone into overdrive during the coronavirus pandemic. The most recent outlet to fall foul of the country's increasingly harsh censo...


Lobbying grenades

General Khalifa Haftar may be in retreat on the battlefield after his Libyan National Army was forced away from Tripoli back to its eastern strongholds but the war for the support ...


The temporary consul

São Tomé and Príncipe has cancelled the appointment of the controversial Chad-born French businessman Vincent Miclet as honorary consul in Marrakech, Morocco, after it emerged he h...