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Published 28th April 2022

Vol 63 No 9


Angola

Alarm grows over vote-rigging plans

Vladimir Putin and João Lourenço at the Kremlin, April 2019. Pic: Mikhail Metzel / TASS / Alamy
Vladimir Putin and João Lourenço at the Kremlin, April 2019. Pic: Mikhail Metzel / TASS / Alamy

Never has the ruling party faced as powerful an opposition as in the election due in August. But officials hope an oil bonanza will boost the party war chest

Falling living standards, mass unemployment and hunger mean the ruling Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola (MPLA) and its leader, President João Lourenço, face the first realistic chance since independence of losing an election.

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Hichilema accused of 'losing focus’

Hakainde Hichilema. Pic: Public domain
Hakainde Hichilema. Pic: Public domain

The President's public appearances are criticised for fighting yesterday's battles instead of concentrating on rocketing prices and the debt burden

President Hakainde Hichilema gave a long and emotional press conference on 25 April further cataloguing his persecution by the previous government – which many critics believ...


War offers Ramaphosa more options

Palladium mining equipment. Pic: Sunshine Seeds / stock.adobe.com
Palladium mining equipment. Pic: Sunshine Seeds / stock.adobe.com

African mining and energy companies move into new markets and try to steer around sanctions on Russia

Moscow's invasion of Ukraine and western sanctions complicate strategy for some South African mining companies but other African companies are benefiting as Europe scrambles for al...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

With bizarre timing, a report forecasting that private wealth in Africa will balloon by 38% to over US$3 trillion by 2031 has emerged as the spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank warned that tens of millions would be thrown into poverty by roaring food and fuel prices. The report's authors, South Africa-based New World Wealth, concluded that patterns of hyper-accumulation by Africa's wealthiest matched other developing regions.

An important difference is that personal and corporat...

With bizarre timing, a report forecasting that private wealth in Africa will balloon by 38% to over US$3 trillion by 2031 has emerged as the spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank warned that tens of millions would be thrown into poverty by roaring food and fuel prices. The report's authors, South Africa-based New World Wealth, concluded that patterns of hyper-accumulation by Africa's wealthiest matched other developing regions.

An important difference is that personal and corporate tax revenues in Africa lag behind levels in Asia and Latin America – partly because of over-generous fiscal codes and poor enforcement capacity. Africa's private wealth contrasts with the reality of hard-pressed state treasuries while rocketing prices force down living standards.

'A war in Europe, in Ukraine, translates into hunger in Africa,' IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said in Washington DC after meeting finance ministers from around the world. At least 20 African economies are in debt distress or close to it. Interest rates hikes in the west are hitting Africa, pushing up the debt burden.

Of the 12 African states that export oil and gas, a handful will benefit from Europe's dash to find alternatives to Russian oil and gas. But those gains will be more than offset by wheat and grain shortages and disrupted supply chains. That underscores why the IMF is pushing on debt restructuring and raising taxes.

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Refugee deal faces delays as legal and political challenges grow

The arrangement under which London could send asylum-seekers to Kigali would be politically useful for both countries' leaders

Britain's plan to send asylum-seekers who cross the English Channel to Rwanda was due to start next month but faces serious legal challenges which could delay its introduction for ...


An Oromo rebellion constrains Abiy

Under international pressure, the federal government promised a truce in Tigray but is now losing ground to the Oromo insurgency

Just weeks after its 24 March announcement of an 'indefinite humanitarian truce' in the civil war in northern Ethiopia centred around the defiant Tigray region, the federal governm...


Insurgents take on the state on all fronts

Prime Minister Abiy’s plan for a unitary state and a modern economy is challenged by myriad local and regional rebellions

The mushrooming Oromo Liberation Army (OLA) insurgency is just one of many security challenges to the federal government in Addis Ababa that have spread since Abiy Ahmed took over ...


Oil spills and theft spike as big oil goes offshore

Bureaucratic rivalries and vested interests are blocking efforts to hold companies and officials responsible for the ecological destruction of the Niger Delta

Nigeria should meet its OPEC quota, due to rise to 1.753 million barrels a day next month, in a matter of weeks after months of struggling to produce around 1.2m-1.3m b/d due to th...


Navigating through the fog of cold war

Only one national cause defines policy in Algiers and Rabat – and it isn't Ukraine

For Algeria and its ally, the Polisario Front, as for their bitter rival Morocco, a 'national cause' remains their main preoccupation. For Algeria it is independence of the Saharan...


Rivals struggle to balance their tickets

The presidential candidates are agonising about their running mates as the deadline for nominations approaches

Coalition and power-sharing deals have been struck ahead of the 9 August presidential elections so the next question is the choice of presidential running mates, as the deadline ne...



Pointers

Gunning for Khama

The diplomatic rift between Botswana and South Africa is set to deepen after Gaborone charged its former President Ian Khama with illegally possessing arms with a messy extradition...


All in the family

Few tears have been shed at the news that Kofi Koduah Sarpong has been retired after five years at the helm of the state oil firm, the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC). ...