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Published 26th August 2021

Vol 62 No 17


Zambia

Reconciliation and a reckoning

Copyright © Africa Confidential 2021
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2021

The new President has drawn a line under his bitter history with Edgar Lungu, but the profiteers of the last six years can expect to be held to account

President Hakainde Hichilema's inauguration on 24 August ended the tense period that followed polling day on 12 August, when it looked as though his predecessor, Edgar Lungu, might refuse to accept defeat. Lungu conceded after a landslide carried the United Party for National Development (UPND) leader to State House by almost a million votes (about 60% of the ballot to Lungu's 38%) in a heated presidential contest – Hichilema's sixth. Earlier, Lungu had vowed never to hand over the presidency to him.


Energy law unsettles rentiers

Pic: Seplat
Pic: Seplat

Reforms speed up shift from oil to gas and trigger a new race for influence over contracts and regulation

Even before the ink was dry, officials and their sponsors had already begun to lobby for top jobs in the new oil sector management structures created by the Petroleum Industry Act,...


Doubts on elections multiply

Khalifa Haftar. Pic: Esam Omran Al-Fetori / Reuters / Alamy
Khalifa Haftar. Pic: Esam Omran Al-Fetori / Reuters / Alamy

The power-sharing government has named a new premier and agreed to reunify the country but the transition is well behind schedule

Officially, the Libyan civil war is over, the country has a single government of national unity (GNU) and a three-man Presidency Council (PC). Almost all of its previously split in...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

'Ethiopia is on the precipice' according to an open letter to be published this week from a pan-African group of intellectuals calling for a negotiated settlement to the country's nine-month conflict. Their timing is critical. All the signs point to another escalation: the Tigray Defence Force is forming a military alliance with the Oromo Liberation Army while United States and European officials warn that Eritrea has sent thousands more troops across the border to back Prime Minister Abiy Ah...

'Ethiopia is on the precipice' according to an open letter to be published this week from a pan-African group of intellectuals calling for a negotiated settlement to the country's nine-month conflict. Their timing is critical. All the signs point to another escalation: the Tigray Defence Force is forming a military alliance with the Oromo Liberation Army while United States and European officials warn that Eritrea has sent thousands more troops across the border to back Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's government forces. After mounting diplomatic pressure, including UN reports of war crimes by its troops, Eritrea withdrew some of its contingent in June.

The authors of the open letter urge Abiy and the Tigrayans to resolve the 10-month conflict by political not military means. They argue for regional organisations such as the African Union and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development to mediate.

Under heavy pressure from its host, the Addis Ababa-based AU has shied away from pronouncing on the conflict. Likewise, Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok's offer to mediate in Ethiopia's war was quickly rebuffed. Despite aid cuts and visa bans (the US sanctioned Eritrea's army chief General Filipos Woldeyohannes this week), Western governments have been sidelined by Abiy. As Afghanistan looks set to dominate international diplomacy for several more weeks, few expect any practical initiatives from the West on Ethiopia. That gives the AU, with some discreet UN backing, a key role – if its leadership dares to seize it.

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The bridge collapses

The courts have administered the last rites to the 'handshake' duo's constitutional reform project

Its supporters referred to the Building Bridges Initiative as 'reggae' but the music stopped on 19 August when the Court of Appeal in Nairobi upheld a High Court decision in May th...


In need of a spark

Electricity supply is on the front line of the economic policy struggle as power cuts rise, investment sources shrink and a low-carbon future looms

How to supply electricity in the long and short term is possibly the most pressing of all South Africa's economic problems and a locus of conflict between statist policies and neo-...


French lessons from Kabul

The West's debacle in Afghanistan may force France to rethink its military stance and diplomacy in West Africa

Two months after Emmanuel Macron announced the end of its anti-Islamist Opération Barkhane in the Sahel, policymakers and public opinion are confronted with the dramatic and...

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Cyril names a half-new cabinet

The President has used the fall-out from the failed insurrection to boost his control over the ruling party, boosting his chances of a second term

It was no ordinary cabinet reshuffle that South Africa's President pulled off on 5 August in the wake of seven fateful days of rioting that left over 300 dead and further damaged t...


Glencore signals new virtue

The trader pledges action on climate change and corruption, but it profits vastly from fossil fuels and faces multiple bribery investigations

Glencore has won plaudits for promises to become carbon neutral. Yet its last annual report vaunts record profits of nearly half a billion dollars from trading oil and coal. And ...


Opposition surges ahead of critical vote

Voter suppression and fraud allegations are vital issues in the final stretch of the campaign

The ruling Patriotic Front is making a final push for votes ahead of the 12 August general election although many of the party's loyalists fear a surge in support for the oppositio...

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Pointers

Playing the waiting game

Stunned by President Kaïs Saïed's decision to suspend parliament and govern by decree, the major political parties, led by the moderate Islamist party Ennahda, are left p...


Taking the stand

The long–awaited trial of 19 defendants on charges including abuse of public office, embezzlement and money laundering related to the US$2 billion hidden loans scandal has fi...