Jump to navigation

Published 24th August 2023

Vol 64 No 17


Zimbabwe

Electoral flaws may stall re-engagement campaign

Pic: @CCCZimbabwe
Pic: @CCCZimbabwe

With the full panoply of state power behind ZANU-PF and its leader, the elections are unlikely to pass the credibility test

Expectations for the fairness of the presidential and parliamentary elections started low and have sunk further after dirty tricks and orchestrated chaos in the towns and cities as Zimbabweans lined up to vote on 23 August. In many townships, Zimbabweans woke up to find pamphlets claiming to come from opposition leader Nelson Chamisa and urging them not to vote because 'the election has already been stolen'. Activists from Chamisa's Citizen's Coalition for Change (CCC) had to scramble to counter the subterfuge as they tried to maximise voting numbers.


General Tiani opens the bidding

Copyright © Africa Confidential 2023
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2023

After calling regional leaders' bluff over military action, Niamey's putschists say they are ready to negotiate

Serious negotiations to take Niger forward from the crisis born of the 26 July coup are at last under way after the Niamey putschists met with the envoys from the Economic Communit...


Pushback tests Tinubu's tilt to the market

Pic: @PBATMediaCentre
Pic: @PBATMediaCentre

Anger on the streets is mounting in the wake of spiralling food and fuel

Hailed by bankers and foreign investors, President Bola Tinubu's decisions to end fuel subsidies and float the naira have collided with reality. The measures are fuelling the highe...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

The crash of a plane on 23 August with Yevgeny Prigozhin, the leader of Russia's mercenary Wagner Group, said to be on board will do little to resolve the questions surrounding the company since its thwarted march on Moscow. Prigozhin and his deputy, Dmitry Utkin, were reported among the ten who died.

Whatever and whoever was responsible for the plane crash, it leaves the Wagner Group network ready for takeover by Russia's military or a merger with another quasi-autonomous mercenary c...

The crash of a plane on 23 August with Yevgeny Prigozhin, the leader of Russia's mercenary Wagner Group, said to be on board will do little to resolve the questions surrounding the company since its thwarted march on Moscow. Prigozhin and his deputy, Dmitry Utkin, were reported among the ten who died.

Whatever and whoever was responsible for the plane crash, it leaves the Wagner Group network ready for takeover by Russia's military or a merger with another quasi-autonomous mercenary company. This time, the Kremlin is likely to keep a tighter grip on the organisation, although it valued the plausible deniability of Wagner's operations. After the Niger putsch, the Kremlin backed the African Union's call for a speedy return to constitutional government; Wagner celebrated the putsch as a victory against French neo-colonialism. Whoever prevails in Niamey, Moscow would hope to have a line to them.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that the fate of Wagner's contracts was in the hands of African states; Vladimir Putin then remarked that Wagner was 'fully financed' by the Russian state. Prigozhin was then spotted at the Russia-Africa summit hosted by Putin last month, prompting further questions about their relationship. Those seem to have been answered with the plane crash. The big question now will be how Putin manages Wagner's assets in Africa and how far he can control its surviving leaders.

Read more

President Faure secretly helps the Niamey junta

While publicly opposing the Niger junta, Lomé is offering it support amid reports  that the Wagner Group is operating in northern Togo

President Faure Gnassingbé's government is assisting the Niger junta to consolidate power, Africa Confidential has learned, although as a member of the Economic Community of...


Nairobi takes lead on economic accords

The US and EU are offering new trade and investment deals to the region. But only Kenya is capitalising on them

Aside from migration control, and its €150 billion (US$163bn) Global Gateway programme – the European Union's underfinanced answer to China's Belt and Road infrastructure scheme – ...


Niamey's junta thumbs its nose

Beyond ignoring military threats and reshuffling the army command, the ruling generals lack a strategy

In another show of insouciance, the Niamey junta named a new team of ministers a few hours before West African leaders met in Abuja on 10 August to discuss how to reinstate Preside...


Government stonewalling on corruption comes under fire

Worsening financial strictures and revenue shortfalls are adding to the urgency of independent calls for tougher action against state skulduggery

As investigations multiply into conflicts of interests in state agencies, lawyers and rights activists are accusing the New Patriotic Party (NPP) government of covering up malfeasa...


The coup d'état as get-out-of-jail card

Unresolved investigations into the diversion of over $125 million of the defence budget may explain why the generals overthrew President Bazoum

Looming in the background of the Niger coup is the role played by the biggest procurement scandal in the country's history – the diversion of nearly half the defence budget i...



Pointers

Abiy looks west

Pushing ahead with a pro-market reform programme as it tries to restructure its foreign debts and secure a loan from the IMF, Abiy Ahmed's government is fighting on many fronts. Co...


Saïed's new crank

President Kais Saïed's decision to replace Najla Bouden, hailed two years earlier ago as the Arab World's first female prime minister, with 66-year-old Ahmed Hachani, a politi...


Torture claims hit Trovoada

The publication of a letter from the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights (OHCHR) to Prime Minister Patrice Trovoada condemning human rights violations following last November's fa...