Essential The Africa the Media Doesn't Tell You About

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Forbes Africa TV Episode 1: Emir Muhammadu Sanusi II on how $20bn vanished from state coffers



Published on May 4, 2016
In an explosive interview with Peace Hyde on Forbes Africa TV, Muhammadu Sanusi II, Emir of Kano and Former Central Bank Governor of Nigeria recounts the day $20 billion dollars of the Nigerian people's money vanished from state coffers and his final meeting with the Former President, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan and what transpired.
 

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5 May 2016
Tanzania Daily News (Dar es Salaam)

Tanzania: Snura's Vulgar 'Chura' Video Banned

Bouncing and grinding, singer Snura Mushi's latest released music video 'Chura' is a hit among her fans, but not for the government which said it breaches moral fabric of the public.



In that stance, the Ministry of Information, Culture, Arts and Sports has yesterday issued a ban on this erotic video and the song recently released by the controversial Bongofleva artist from being aired on mainstream and social media in the country.

The ministry's Head of Information and Communication, Zawadi Msalla, said that the ban was necessitated due to immoral acts displayed in the video, which has become popular soon after the artist released it via social media.

Since its release, the video had gone viral on You Tube. "The government was shocked at the video," she said, while also warning that the government organs are on the ground watching such singers closely and stiff action will be taken against them.

Apart from banning Chura song and video, the ministry has also banned the controversial artist's public shows, until the accused artist amend her original Chura song video, which according to Msalla, it is immoral and was totally against the country's tradition.

Also the artist has been ordered to immediately remove the video from You Tube. "She has also been instructed not to distribute or release her controversial and immoral video in other social media such as Whatsapp, Instrgram, face book and several others," warned Msalla.

Msalla has also urged people not to circulate the song via any social media and those who will go against the order will be charged according to the cyber crime act, endorsed last year.

In another development, few hours after the announcement of its ban, Chura video song produced by Chaiders Records was removed in various blogs and social media, however, the audio was yet to be removed. According to Msalla, the ban will be withdrawn if the artist makes amend of her Chura video song and completing the procedures of registering her artistic work at the National Arts Council, BASATA.

Morals should precede such shows as ‘Snura-Chura’
DAILY NEWS Reporter
06 May 2016
CHURA.JPG



WITH its megastars such as Diamond Platnumz fetching multi-millions from their works, Bongo Flava today seems to have shrugged off its American core to dwell most on African dance.

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Megahits such as Mdogo Mdogo by Diamond Platinumz, Yamoto Band’s Nitakupwelepweta or Alli Kiba’s Mwana have won a crossover appeal after borrowing much from African folk dances, especially from Segere of Wazaramo, Wangoni’s Lizombe and Wadigo’s dance from, most often, Duga area in Tanga.

Experts claim that Bongo Flava is no longer connected to America R&B as it was during its infancy in early 1990. An expert from Police Jazz, Adelgot Haule, said it was good to incorporate Africa dances since they strictly respect rhythm styled in ‘call and response’ format, which he said is danceable and attractive. “The music of the new generation has found that African dances are stronger than the syncopational American R&B,” he noted.

Haule believes African folk dances need to be treated carefully since not all dance styles are ideal for public appearance. “We know that most African dances are either a waist work or foot work, but there are some of the dancing elements that need care in handling,” he warned.

As former Mlimani Park trumpeter Ally Yahaya sees it, Bongoflava has managed to appeal even to the old generation because of its innovation. “There are young men and women who are doing well in the market. They sing well and play instruments professionally.

But lack of manners in their dancing styles, sometimes annoy me and others of my age,” said Yahya. He said some girls are dancing half naked or doing wild waist works on stage.

“There are others who even strip naked on stage as I have seen in the banned ‘Vigodoro dances,” he noted. He and other music enthusiasts believe that changes are inevitable in music, but self respect and respect of African values must be considered in all what deserve to be watched in public.

Bongo Flava is the new generation music that erupted after Tanzania made reforms in early 1990s, that also introduced a free economy policy. Music or arts, which previously, enjoyed the massive support from the government, had to fight to cope with the situation created by reforms. Band music found no place in the new Tanzania, a situation that later spawned the growth of solo artistry.

Music market was strictly under the control of individuals, who, however, had to observe ethics and guidelines governed by the National Arts Council, BASATA. More commercialised, music done under solo artistry was sometimes found going to breach cultural ethics.

The recent case that saw a female artiste, Snura Mushi and her ‘Chura’ song being slapped a ban for vulgarism is one of the challenges of the new generation music in trying to win market locally and internationally. Bouncing and grinding, singer Snura Mushi’s latest released music video ‘Chura’ is a hit, which was banned by the government for breaching moral fabric of the public.

In that stance, the Ministry of Information, Culture, Arts and Sports issued a ban on this erotic video and the song recently released by the controversial Bongofleva artist from being aired on mainstream and social media in the country.

It said the ban was necessitated due to immoral acts displayed in the video, which has become popular soon after the artist released it via social media. Since its release, the video had gone viral on You Tube.

“The government was shocked at the video,” she said, while also warning that the government organs are on the ground, watching such singers closely and stiff action will be taken against them.

Apart from banning ‘Chura’, both song and video, the ministry has also banned the controversial artist’s public shows, until she amends her original ‘Chura’ song/video, which according to Msalla, is immoral and totally against the country’s traditions.

Also, the artist has been ordered to immediately remove the video from You Tube. “She has also been instructed not to distribute or release her controversial and immoral video in other social media such as Whatsapp, Instagram, Facebook and several others,” warned Msalla.

Msalla has also urged people not to circulate the song via any social media and those who will go against the order will be charged according to the cyber crime act, endorsed last year.

In another development, few hours after the announcement of its ban, the ‘Chura’ video/song produced by Chaiders Records was removed in various blogs and social media, however, the audio was yet to be removed.

According to Msalla, the ban will be withdrawn if the artist makes amendment of her ‘Chura’ video song and completing the procedures of registering her artistic work at the National Arts Council, BASATA.

The controversial artist who last year came with a hit song ‘Najibadua’ becomes the second lady artist to be banned by the authorities following the last year’s ban of another controversial Bongofleva artist Zuwena Mohamed alias ‘Shilole’.

Shilole was slapped a one-year ban by BASATA, following her immoral show in Antwerp, Belgium. The ban was imposed after a video and pictures shot during her performance in Belgium revealed dress exposing some of her inner parts. While the new era has dawned in Tanzania, complete with new artistes and new dancing styles, moral ethics need to be strictly observed.


The notorious artist who last year came with a hit song 'Najibadua' becomes the second lady artist to be banned by the authorities following the last year's ban of another controversial Bongofleva artist Zuwena Mohamed alias 'Shilole' .

Shilole was slapped a one-year ban by BASATA, following her immoral show in Antwerp, Belgium. The ban was imposed after a video and pictures shot during her performance in reveal dress exposing some of her inner parts.

http://dailynews.co.tz/index.php/analysis/49547-morals-should-precede-such-shows-as-snura-chura
 

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South Africa: Government On Track to Provide 1.5 Million Houses

4 MAY 2016

00271646:17b0c7cc3b817e7381e557a6f1ef3238:arc614x376:w614:us1.jpg

Photo: Masixole Feni/GroundUp

Cape Town — Human Settlements Minister Lindiwe Sisulu says government aims to make available 1.5 million housing opportunities during the current term of office.

The Minister said this when she tabled the department's Budget Vote Speech in the National Assembly on Tuesday.

"We have committed that we will, between now and 2019, deliver 1.5 million housing opportunities. We remain committed to changing the apartheid spatial planning and developing new cities like Cosmo City where our people stay close to economic opportunities and social amenities," she said.

The Minister's announcement comes after the department announced in Cosmo City two weeks ago that the department had delivered 4.3 million houses and subsidies since 1994, which benefitted more than 20 million South Africans.

These consist of 2.8 million completed houses, 986 000 serviced sites, and 121 000 social housing units. It also includes more than 360 000 households, who took the opportunity to acquire ownership of their previously state owned rental properties; 69 000 upgraded community rental units and 6 000 finance-linked subsidies.

Government is estimated to have spent over R500 billion on top structures, bulk services, social and economic amenities to achieve this.

"We can confirm today that after a number of years of decline in our delivery of serviced stands and housing units, for the financial year 2015/2016 we have turned the tide. Our partnership with developers, banks and communities are beginning to bear fruit and we have constructed 153 000 serviced houses, a new record after years of delivery challenges.

"We will progressively formalise informal settlements by providing basic services to restore dignity to our people," Minister Sisulu said.

A total of 143 756 households in informal settlements were given access to water and sanitation since the inception of the Medium Term Strategic Framework on 1 April 2014 up to 31 December 2015.

"Nationally, the percentage of households living in formal dwellings increased from 76% to 80% between 2002 and 2014. The rate of provisioning of state-subsided dwellings surpassed the provisioning of formal dwellings in the private sector between 2009 and 2014, and the percentage of beneficiaries of state subsidised housing increased from 5.6% in 2002 to 13.6% in 2014. Informal dwellings in settlements and backyards have decreased from 17% in 2002 to 11% in 2014," she said.

South Africa: Government On Track to Provide 1.5 Million Houses
 

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Liberia's 2016 GDP growth projected to recover - IMF
Ken Karuri with Reuters 8 hours ago

LIBERIA

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Liberia’s economy is projected to grow by 2.5 percent in 2016 – compared to 0.3 per cent last year – buoyed by higher gold production and a rebound in services and construction sectors, the International Monetary Fund has said.



In a “statement” released at the end of a visit by a mission to Liberia, which was battered by a three-year Ebola outbreak, the IMF said that economic growth was projected to stabilise at around 6 percent over the medium term.

This is however lower than the 8 percent projected before, reflecting the scaling-back of investment and production plans in the mining sector. Inflation is expected to remain at around 7 percent, the IMF said.

A significant number of non-performing loans have also hampered the banking sector.

“The modest pace of the post-Ebola recovery is affecting the banking sector, which continues to be weighed down by a large volume of non-performing loans,” the IMF said in its statement.

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf said in September it would take two years for Liberia’s economy to recover from an Ebola epidemic that killed more than 4,800 people in the country and hurt the agricultural and mining sectors.

The West African nation was declared free of the Ebola virus by global health experts in January but suffered a new Ebola death last month.

Liberia's 2016 GDP growth projected to recover - IMF
 

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Zambia invests in US$1.2-bn power supply plants

Published on 09 May 2016
By Michael Malakata

zamflag.png
Zambian president Edgar Lungu has commissioned the construction of two renewable power station plants valued at US$1.2-billion to supply the country's highly anticipated PC assembly plant and data centre.

The project, which will lead to the production of a combined 100 megawatts of power by the end of the year, is being funded by the World Bank and is the first project of its kind in Africa under the financial institution's scaling up solar programme.

The programme aims to accelerate the use of alternative and renewable energy sources to reduce the impact of insufficient rainfall on the country's hydro power energy resources.

The two power stations will be located in the Lusaka Multi-facility Economic Zone and will be implemented in partnership with Zambia's Industrial Development Corporation (IDC), the government's development arm.

READ MORE
One door opens for Zambia's long-awaited PC plant
Zambia to proceed with computer assembly plant
Renewable energy the only option says Zambia's govt
Edgar Lungu

In early April the country's regulator, the Zambia Information and Communication Technology Authority (ZICTA), confirmed that it had signed a lease agreement with the Lusaka South Multi Facility Economic Zone to facilitate construction of the computer assembly plant and data centre.

The resources are expected to be operational next year.

"It is regrettable that the current power deficit has negatively affected productivity levels and government revenue. With 365 days of sunshine a year, Zambia has great potential to raise investment in the solar energy and reduce dependency on hydro power," Lungu said

World Bank representative Ina Marlene Ruthenberg said the introduction of solar energy in Zambia will help reduce the cost of electricity.

The institution aims to generate up to 600 megawatts in the Southern African country as part of its scaling up solar programme.

Like many other countries in Africa, including Zimbabwe, Zambia is facing a critical shortage of power resulting in increased load shedding.

Zambia invests in US$1.2-bn power supply plants - ITWeb Africa
 

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Credit cards in Africa: continent lagging behind...but that's great potential right there

10 MAY 2016 18:25MORRIS KIRUGA

1100

AFRICA is still the world’s least banked region, presenting huge potential not just for banking growth, but also mobile and card payment systems.

Modern credit cards have been around for nearly seven decades, and less than half that time on the African continent. Despite massive advertising and investment by global payment companies such as Visa, credit card penetration in Sub-Saharan Africa remains low, estimated at below 5 percent. Most of these cards issued to the upper middle class and to high net worth individuals.

A 2012 study done by Moody’s Analytics for Visa on the impact of payment cards in 56 economies showed that in South Africa, the total contribution to GDP was USD 7.8 billion. South Africa has an average 1.25 payment cards per person compared to Morocco, Nigeria, Egypt and Kenya which have between 0.18 and 0.33.

This discrepancy can be attributed to South Africa’s early adoption of payment cards.

South Africa’s card holders are the busiest in the region with an average 38 to 40 transactions per year. However, Egypt has the highest average transaction value from payment cards in the region. Nigeria is a distant fourth after Morocco and South Africa.

The big card boost
A similar but wider March 2016 report by Moody’s Analytics showed that African countries recorded, unsurprisingly, the lowest economic impact of electronic payments. At 0.05 percent average increase in GDP due to card use, Africa’s economies are lagging behind but showing the highest potential. The study found that 1% increase in usage of electronic payments could produce on average about $104 billion in consumption.

600x360


In Nigeria, the use of payment cards added $640 million cumulatively to the GDP and 16,880 jobs annually between 2011 and 2015. Nigeria’s efforts to move towards a cashless economy drove its payment card statistics from 30.5 million in 2009 to 49.5 million five years later. Despite this massive growth, credit cards only grew from 300,800 in 2008 to 729,000 in 2012. By 2018, the total number of payment cards in Nigeria will hit anywhere above 81.4 million.

In Kenya, the use of electronic payment injected $70 million into the economy, with only 5,330 jobs added per year (2011-2015). A 2014 report by Market Research Store showed that Kenya’s credit and debit cards increased from 3.8 million in 2009 to 9.7 million in 2013. At the midpoint, in 2011, there were only 55,235 credit cards in Kenya compared to 7.1 million debit cards. The disproportionate growth applies to most other African countries, despite efforts by banks and some governments to encourage use of cards.

The hurdles
In the most developed credit card market in Africa, South Africa, some banks such as First National bank and Standard Bank now issue credit cards to students. This is unheard of in most other markets, with credit card penetration beyond specific income levels being nil. A study into the low penetration of credit cards in Ghana said the main obstacles to rapid growth was lack of: a proper address system, a proper identification system, efficient internet facilities, a central database system, and a high rate of default.

A bank doesn’t really need to know where you live or how much you earn to issue you with a debit card. They only do so for data collection and Know Your Customer (KYC) policies. If it’s a prepaid card, the bank doesn’t even need to know your credit history but if it’s a credit card, then it is the primary ask.

Since credit reference systems are also relatively new on the continent outside of South Africa, the risk of default is still considered to be high in several countries. Most governments recognise this and are trying to solve it with single national identification systems. In some countries, this could be linked to national payment systems to further tighten the noose on corruption, tax evasion and money laundering.

Most Sub-Saharan African countries do not have the infrastructure to support widespread credit card use. While ATM penetration is at its highest, there are relatively few places outside of upscale hotels and destinations where you can use a credit card.

World Cup effect
Even in South Africa, you couldn’t pay for fuel with a credit card until 2010. The global tourism prospects of the World Cup forced the South African government to change the rules to boost consumption. This situation is mostly because the demand for credit cards is not as high as it is for prepaid ones.

The main problem seems to be the psychology behind a credit card. Even people who can afford to carry credit cards view them as facilitators of impulse purchases. The Ghana study also suggests low literacy rates are another reason for the low success of credit cards. Another one may be cultural systems that allow borrowing outside of banks, and the stiff relationship between banks and customers. In most cases, the only people who can afford to have such a credit line are high income earners and commercial customers.

But there’s a fluke in Kenya, for example, where mobile payment systems are cannibalising on the little progress payment cards had made. Between November 2014 and November 2015, for example, card payments in Kenya reduced by 18.2% while mobile payments grew by 25%.

A puzzle
The growth doesn’t even make much sense, at first. M-Shwari, Safaricom’s mobile credit system, charges 7.5% interest on loans. Compare this to credit card interest rate offers which are as low as 2% in some cases. The more expensive offer is winning, and by a wide margin. Mobile wallets carry the inherent advantage of mobile money; that your phone is the pay point.

A growing market for credit cards in Africa is the original market, high net worth individuals. Most offers now come tailored for specific income segments. In South Africa, Centurion “Black Card”, issued through Nedbank, is an invite-only credit card. To make one, titanium metal is heated to 1,688 degrees, handcrafted into a card and then emblazoned with the member’s name. There are similar or slightly less exclusive credit cards on offer in most countries, mostly through international banks.

In December 2015, Nigeria’s central bank announced a ban on credit and debit card use abroad. Among Nigeria’s famously wealthy elite, the use of a credit card in high-end shops in Johannesburg and London is a way of life. The market has grown so big that BBC reports that some high-end shops in London have welcome signs in Hausa.

Credit cards in Africa: continent lagging behind...but that's great potential right there
 

Bawon Samedi

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Credit cards in Africa: continent lagging behind...but that's great potential right there

10 MAY 2016 18:25MORRIS KIRUGA

1100

AFRICA is still the world’s least banked region, presenting huge potential not just for banking growth, but also mobile and card payment systems.

Modern credit cards have been around for nearly seven decades, and less than half that time on the African continent. Despite massive advertising and investment by global payment companies such as Visa, credit card penetration in Sub-Saharan Africa remains low, estimated at below 5 percent. Most of these cards issued to the upper middle class and to high net worth individuals.

A 2012 study done by Moody’s Analytics for Visa on the impact of payment cards in 56 economies showed that in South Africa, the total contribution to GDP was USD 7.8 billion. South Africa has an average 1.25 payment cards per person compared to Morocco, Nigeria, Egypt and Kenya which have between 0.18 and 0.33.

This discrepancy can be attributed to South Africa’s early adoption of payment cards.

South Africa’s card holders are the busiest in the region with an average 38 to 40 transactions per year. However, Egypt has the highest average transaction value from payment cards in the region. Nigeria is a distant fourth after Morocco and South Africa.

The big card boost
A similar but wider March 2016 report by Moody’s Analytics showed that African countries recorded, unsurprisingly, the lowest economic impact of electronic payments. At 0.05 percent average increase in GDP due to card use, Africa’s economies are lagging behind but showing the highest potential. The study found that 1% increase in usage of electronic payments could produce on average about $104 billion in consumption.

600x360


In Nigeria, the use of payment cards added $640 million cumulatively to the GDP and 16,880 jobs annually between 2011 and 2015. Nigeria’s efforts to move towards a cashless economy drove its payment card statistics from 30.5 million in 2009 to 49.5 million five years later. Despite this massive growth, credit cards only grew from 300,800 in 2008 to 729,000 in 2012. By 2018, the total number of payment cards in Nigeria will hit anywhere above 81.4 million.

In Kenya, the use of electronic payment injected $70 million into the economy, with only 5,330 jobs added per year (2011-2015). A 2014 report by Market Research Store showed that Kenya’s credit and debit cards increased from 3.8 million in 2009 to 9.7 million in 2013. At the midpoint, in 2011, there were only 55,235 credit cards in Kenya compared to 7.1 million debit cards. The disproportionate growth applies to most other African countries, despite efforts by banks and some governments to encourage use of cards.

The hurdles
In the most developed credit card market in Africa, South Africa, some banks such as First National bank and Standard Bank now issue credit cards to students. This is unheard of in most other markets, with credit card penetration beyond specific income levels being nil. A study into the low penetration of credit cards in Ghana said the main obstacles to rapid growth was lack of: a proper address system, a proper identification system, efficient internet facilities, a central database system, and a high rate of default.

A bank doesn’t really need to know where you live or how much you earn to issue you with a debit card. They only do so for data collection and Know Your Customer (KYC) policies. If it’s a prepaid card, the bank doesn’t even need to know your credit history but if it’s a credit card, then it is the primary ask.

Since credit reference systems are also relatively new on the continent outside of South Africa, the risk of default is still considered to be high in several countries. Most governments recognise this and are trying to solve it with single national identification systems. In some countries, this could be linked to national payment systems to further tighten the noose on corruption, tax evasion and money laundering.

Most Sub-Saharan African countries do not have the infrastructure to support widespread credit card use. While ATM penetration is at its highest, there are relatively few places outside of upscale hotels and destinations where you can use a credit card.

World Cup effect
Even in South Africa, you couldn’t pay for fuel with a credit card until 2010. The global tourism prospects of the World Cup forced the South African government to change the rules to boost consumption. This situation is mostly because the demand for credit cards is not as high as it is for prepaid ones.

The main problem seems to be the psychology behind a credit card. Even people who can afford to carry credit cards view them as facilitators of impulse purchases. The Ghana study also suggests low literacy rates are another reason for the low success of credit cards. Another one may be cultural systems that allow borrowing outside of banks, and the stiff relationship between banks and customers. In most cases, the only people who can afford to have such a credit line are high income earners and commercial customers.

But there’s a fluke in Kenya, for example, where mobile payment systems are cannibalising on the little progress payment cards had made. Between November 2014 and November 2015, for example, card payments in Kenya reduced by 18.2% while mobile payments grew by 25%.

A puzzle
The growth doesn’t even make much sense, at first. M-Shwari, Safaricom’s mobile credit system, charges 7.5% interest on loans. Compare this to credit card interest rate offers which are as low as 2% in some cases. The more expensive offer is winning, and by a wide margin. Mobile wallets carry the inherent advantage of mobile money; that your phone is the pay point.

A growing market for credit cards in Africa is the original market, high net worth individuals. Most offers now come tailored for specific income segments. In South Africa, Centurion “Black Card”, issued through Nedbank, is an invite-only credit card. To make one, titanium metal is heated to 1,688 degrees, handcrafted into a card and then emblazoned with the member’s name. There are similar or slightly less exclusive credit cards on offer in most countries, mostly through international banks.

In December 2015, Nigeria’s central bank announced a ban on credit and debit card use abroad. Among Nigeria’s famously wealthy elite, the use of a credit card in high-end shops in Johannesburg and London is a way of life. The market has grown so big that BBC reports that some high-end shops in London have welcome signs in Hausa.

Credit cards in Africa: continent lagging behind...but that's great potential right there
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In it to win: The game-changing projects in Africa completed in last year—and those to watch

28 APR 2016 11:40 | M&G AFRICA WRITER

Transport costs are 100% higher in Africa and other things are tough, but these countries are going beyond the talk to their fortunes

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Ethiopia's light rail system had much of the continent talking. (Photo/File/AFP)

SAMPLE these numbers. Transport costs are 100% higher in Africa. Only a third of the population have access to electricity—in rich countries this rises to between 70-90%. Just 6% have access to the internet, compared to 40% in other developing nations. Despite its rich water resources food security is a constant thorn in the flesh, but only 5% of agriculture is under irrigation.

Such infrastructure gaps continue to weigh down the continent, reducing the dividend from its brisk growth of the last two decades. But some countries—and mega investors too—are making huge progress in reducing the size of the deficit.

In 2014 we chronicled some projects completed that year. Here, we continue to monitor the progress on actual delivery of projects that help transform the continent over the last year.


Ethiopia light-rail system
Ethiopia’s New Year arrived with a bang, as the Addis Metro chugged to life, making it the country’s, and sub-Sahara Africa’s first light rail system. With a price tag of close to $500 million the 32-kilometre electrified line has helped ease their daily commutes, Addis Ababa residents invariably tell you.
The transport system was built over three years by the China Railway Group Limited after the Ethiopian government secured 85% of funding from the Export-Import Bank of China.
Africa’s only other light rail systems are found in North Africa—including in Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia.

Morocco’s solar plant
Early this year Morocco switched on the first phase of its concentrated solar-power complex, which when completed in 2020 will become the world’s largest solar power plant—with its mirrors covering the same area as the capital Rabat.
The NOOR solar thermal plant cost $894 million, with a final price tag of about $2.4 billion for the whole project, and an anticipated production of 2 Gigawatts. Among its financiers are the African Development Bank (AfDB).

Egypt’s ‘new’ Suez Canal
Completed in a span of only one year, Egypt president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in August inaugurated the ‘new Suez Canal’—a 72-km section that speeds up traffic along the key international shipping route.

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President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi looks on proudly at the new waterway. File

Officials called the $9 billion project Egypt’s ‘”gift to the world”, cutting waiting time for vessels from 18 to 11 hours, and doubling revenue for the country to $13.2 billion by 2023.

Guinea’s hydropower dam
In September, Guinea president Alpha Conde roped in his counterparts from Congo-Brazzaville and Niger to inaugurate the $526 million Kaleta hydroelectric plant.
“Without electricity, Africa cannot develop,” he said, struggling to control his delight. “With electricity, we will industrialise and we will no longer see our children dying in the waters of the Mediterranean because they despair of Africa.”
With an output of 240 MW, the dam, 75% funded by China, came in 12 months ahead of schedule, having been built over three years. It has already tripled electricity supply, helping end endemic blackouts especially in the capital Conakry.

Sudan agribusiness project
Sudan president Omar al-Bashir in January inaugurated the first 20,000-acre phase of a joint billion-dollar agricultural project with a United Arab Emirates company.
Located in the northern state, the crop and animal-feed production project uses rain irrigation technology and is estimated to span 130,000 acres when complete. Sudan is already home to the renowned Gezira irrigation project.

Puntland airport
The Bosaso international airport sits in the third largest city in Somalia, and is a vital economic lifeline for the semi-autonomous Puntland.
In January, it was inaugurated by president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, who termed it one of the territory’s “big achievements” in decades.
The refurbishment now allows for large aircraft to land, as a dirt runway became a gleaming 2.6-km tarmac one, the work done by a Chinese contractor. It is seen significantly boosting the northern economy.

Zimbabwe dual-carriageway
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In the scheme of mega projects the inauguration of a road in Zimbabwe by president Robert Mugabe might not have registered on the scale. But for its wider value, it should. Now a dual-carriageway, it leads to the country’s main airport. But in an understanding of how the economy is struggling, it took five years to upgrade the 12-km stretch and was completed just a week ahead of Chinese president Xi Jinping’s historic visit last year. China has become the country’s major benefactor, and is upgrading two of Zimbabwe’s biggest power plants.

Various countries, Dangote Cement plants
Though not strictly public projects, the commissioning last year of multi-million dollar cement plants in each of Cameroon, Ethiopia, Zambia and Tanzania by African transnational investor Aliko Dangote was attended by all their presidents.
It is an appreciation of the scale of the investment and the jobs it creates, but also with cement as a major input in construction, helping to keep scarce funds inside the continent.

And those to watch…..

Ethiopia-Djibouti railway
On November 21, the first freight train to operate on the new standard gauge railway reached Merebe Mermesa, some 112 km south of Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa, its inaugural journey pushed up by the current drought the country is facing. Contractors are now pushing the finishing touches on the 756-kilometre line by a June deadline, with current estimates being that work is 90% complete. The electrified $4 billion railway connects Addis Ababa to its main port of use, Djibouti. Built in three phases, it is largely financed and constructed by Chinese firms.

Standard Gauge Railway, Kenya
Another transnational railway line is being constructed out of Kenya, with plans to connect on to Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda and South Sudan.

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The 609-km standard gauge $3.4 billion line will is scheduled to be completed in December 2017, but earlier for the Kenya portion, which is a key legacy of the current administration ahead of elections in August 2017. Like with the Ethiopia line, it runs parallel to an older meter (narrower) gauge.

Lake Turkana Wind Project
Located in Kenya, it involves the construction of a 300MW wind farm—making it the largest wind farm project in Africa when completed. It has a total bill of $680 million.

N2 Gateway Housing project, SA
Projected to be completed in 2017, the multi-billion rand housing project outside Cape Town opened bypresident Jacob Zuma in October has already delivered 14,000 units, with a target of 22,000. It targets informal dwellers.

Ethiopia airport expansion
Ethiopia is currently expanding its main airport, as it seeks to become a regional aviation mega hub in the mould of Dubai. The Horn of Africa country seeks to take advantage of its plum geographic location between African and Asia with the phased project estimated to cost $350 million but which is the precursor of a planned second $4 billion airport.

In it to win: The game-changing projects in Africa completed in last year—and those to watch

Ethiopia been putting in work.
 
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