Essential The Africa the Media Doesn't Tell You About

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Japan pays for 110/33kV sub-station in Mozambique

SEPTEMBER 1ST, 2016
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Japan’s Mitsubishi Corporation will build a 110/33kV, 40MVA sub-station in Namialo, Nampula province, northern Mozambique, under a contract signed with state-owned electricity company EdM, the company said.

In a statement published in Maputo, EdM also said a contract had been signed in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, on the sidelines of the 6th International Conference on African Development (TICAD VI).

The contract signed with the Japanese group includes construction of a 110/33kV, 40MVA sub-station, three kilometres of 110kV power line and three 110kV towers to interconnect with the existing line and renewal of the remote control system at the 220/110kV and 110/33kV sub-stations in the city of Nampula.

The building project of the electricity transmission network in the Nacala Corridor is funded by the Japanese government in the form of a donation, under an agreement signed between the Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and the government of Mozambique with a budget of US$19.5 million, the statement said.

The tender to select the contractor was launched in April 2016 and ended in June 2016, with three Japanese companies submitting their technical and financial proposals for the contract.

The tender ended with the selection of the Mitsubishi Corporation of Japan to implement the project with a proposal of US$14.5 million, whose completion is scheduled for February 2018. (macauhub/MZ)

Japan Pays For 110/33kV Sub-station in Mozambique
 

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Benin will no longer require visas from other Africans
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Getting a pass. (Reuters/Siphiwe Sibeko)
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Lily Kuo
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August 31, 2016 Quartz Africa


Africans visiting Benin will no longer need visas to enter the West African nation, the latest country to join a continent-wide campaign to make travel in Africa easier for Africans.




Over the past year, members of the African Union (AU) have made steps toward the lofty goal of turning Africa into a “continent with seamless borders,” modeled after other regional blocs like the European Union. Benin joins a list of only 13 African countries (pdf), including Rwanda, Mauritius, the Seychelles, and most recently Ghana, that have loosened or scrapped visa requirements altogether.




‘‘Learning from Rwanda, I have decided that Benin will no longer require visas for other Africans,’‘ Benin’s president Patrice Talon said in Rwanda today (Aug. 30).




Intra-continental travel is notoriously difficult for African citizens, with countries often imposing stricter restrictions on their fellow Africans than visitors from outside the continent. Americans can travel to 20 African countries visa-free or by getting visas on arrival.




Benin’s decision follows the launch of an AU passport meant to ease travel between member states either by allowing visa-free entry or streamlining the visa process.




Still, the reality of a borderless bloc is still a ways off. So far, only Rwandan president Paul Kagame and Chadian president Idriss Eby hold the passport. Other heads of state and AU officials are being considered first for the documents. Regardless, the cost of cross-border travel is still prohibitively expensive for most travelers.




Fears of visa-free travel encouraging migrants are also a major obstacleto wider adoption. In South Africa and more recently Zambia, localresentment against migrants and foreigners has turned violent.




Sign up for the Quartz Africa Weekly Brief — the most important and interesting news from across th

Benin will no longer require visas from other Africans
 

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Goddamn I hate Buhari :scust:
Recession: Moody’s warns of dire economic consequences for Nigeria - Vanguard News
•Projects rise in external debt to 5.2% of GDP
•As non-passage of PIB, poor governance fuel recession

By Michael Eboh & Ediri Ejoh Global rating agency, Moody’s, yesterday, warned of a further contraction of the Nigeria, while it disclosed that the declining value of the naira would engender a marginal increase in Nigeria’s external debt to 5.2 per cent of Gross Domestic Product, GDP, by end of 2016 from 3.3 per cent in 2015. Buhari This came as expert blamed the long awaited passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB, and lack of good governance to reasons for poor returns expected to cushion the effect of the downturn in the price of crude at the international market. Moody’s, in a Global Credit Research report released in Dubai, cautioned that while the Federal Government of Nigeria should comfortably meet its financing gap over the next 12 to 18 months, increasing liquidity pressures, rising inflation and stagnant growth pose key challenges.

In the report titled, ‘Government of Nigeria: FAQ on Credit Impications of Naira Depreciation, Low Oil Price and Broader Economic Challenges,’ Moody’s said, “The Government of Nigeria (B1 stable) continues to face low oil prices, volatile oil production, a spike in inflation that has eroded purchasing power, foreign exchange scarcity and an economy that has entered technical recession. “Moody’s projects stagnation in real GDP in 2016 and only subdued growth at 2.5 per cent in 2017.” The rating agency projected a deficit of around 3.7 per cent of GDP in 2016 for Nigeria, compared to a deficit of 3.8 per cent deficit in 2015. Commenting on the development, Aurelien Mali, Vice President and Senior Credit Officer at Moody’s, said, “We expect that Nigeria will contain pressures on its public finances in the short term. “However, there is greater doubt about the severity of the impact of these challenges, particularly on government liquidity and economic growth, over the medium term.” Moody’s, however, noted that it views the recent devaluation of the naira as credit positive, stating that the new system should enable the naira to better absorb external shocks over time, while dollar availability should gradually increase. “Moreover, the fiscal benefit of the depreciation and the current oil price, which is above the budgeted oil price, exceeds the loss in oil output,” it said.

Moody’s disclosed, however, that the depreciation implies a material loss in purchasing power given import-price inflation, adding that it expects inflation to accelerate to 18 per cent by year’s end, before falling to an average of 12.5 per cent in 2017, based on the recent two percentage point hike in the Central Bank’s policy rate to 14 per cent. Moody’s said, “States and local governments will benefit from the naira depreciation, offsetting the negative impact on oil production from the recent attacks in the Niger Delta. Moody’s expects authorities to reduce spending if revenues under perform. “Moody’s notes that attacks on pipelines and key energy infrastructure in the Niger Delta have cut oil production to historic lows. If oil production stagnates at its current, or lower level during the rest of the year, the expansionary spending envisioned by the current budget will be at risk, which would hurt growth. “However, the Central Bank of Nigeria has sent strong signals to the market that it will prioritize stemming inflation over promoting growth, as well as supporting the return of foreign capital.” Meanwhile, a renowned Petroleum Economist and President, Nigerian Association for Energy Economics, NAEE, Professor Wumi Iledare, has attributed non-passage of Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB, poor governance among others as reasons for the country’s recession. According to the University don, “The uncertainty in the Petroleum industry, has brought about zero activities in the petroleum industry, which has in turn resulted to zero revenues that should have supported the economy in a time as this. “There is no money because of the low crude price, production level is down; and there is no activity ongoing in the oil and gas business. It is a recipe of disaster.”

The implication He argued that the woes in the petroleum industry should not be attributed to recession. “Recession cannot be attributed to the reason why the oil and gas industry is not functional as expected, but rather, poor governance and the long awaited passage of the PIB. “The reason why it is blamed on recession is because the government cannot meet up their obligation to increase the activities in the industry, due to lack of funds. And the reason for lack of funds is because there is nothing going on in the petroleum industry. “This is caused as a result of governance and lack of good institutional framework. It is a two way thing, the oil and gas is not moving in the right direction and so there is no money in the economy and then it goes back. It is called the circular flow of income. “For now, the engine that drives the economy is the oil and gas industry, and it is not been greased. Therefore, it cannot crack hard what should reap our fortune, and by this illustration, the country’s economy cannot hit its target.” On the way forward, he noted that, “the oil and gas industry must be governed properly. If only we had done what we had to do eight years ago, the industry would not be in this mess. “The solution is that the President should wake up and set up an economy emergency team with competent people and not based on friendship. Nepotism is worst than crime. He should drag his net wider and pick those who should help him away from political partisans.” He added that more resources should be channelled first to developing the country’s infrastructure, “which would drive the economy.”
 

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Kufuor disappointed in Ghana's failure to emerge as Africa's financial hub

Source: Ghana | Myjoyonline.com | Abubakar Ibrahim | Email: abubakar.ibrahim@myjoyonline.com

Date: 02-09-2016 Time: 11:09:12:am

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Former President John Agyekum Kufuor has expressed disappointment over Ghana’s failure to become a financial hub in Africa.

According to him, successive governments after he had served his eight-year term in office failed to see through some of the policies he initiated as president within the financial sector.

He cited examples including plans to set up an offshore bank in Ghana, a project he contends would have strengthened the Ghanaian economy.

Former President Kufuor disclosed this at a Joy FM thought leadership program where he was addressing youth from various tertiary institutions. The Dream Oval Thought Series provide the platform celebrated persons to share ideas and knowledge.

"If the 2012 elections had come my way, that is if the New Patriotic Party had won, many things we put on course would have matured. For instance, at that time, we had secured a partnership with Barclays International to do offshore banking in Ghana," he said.

"We set up the offices and made the laws...and if that project has been maintained and sustained, perhaps much of the monies from Southern Europe, South America and on the continent of Africa would be here. Ghana would be managing the hard currencies of the neighbourhood and as far outfield as Europe," he added.

Mr Kufuor said because the NPP lost the elections within a year after the loss the National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the administration of the late John Evans Atta Mills cancelled the agreement.

"That hurts, I couldn't understand it then and I can't understand it now," he said adding it would have been good for the economy.

The ex-President said he was unimpressed with the economic performance of Ghana considering the country was in the same stead as South Korea several decades ago.

Mr Kufuor cited the example of South Korea's development which he said revolves around “good governance and leadership.”

He says governments the world over are “expected to govern and not to do business,” adding, they “should set the framework to ensure that the private sector engages in business and does it appropriately.”

So far, the Dream Oval Thought Series has hosted veteran Ghanaian musician, Egya Koo Nimo to speak about 'palm wine' music, Professor Azumah Nelson, the legendary boxer; footballer Kwame Ayew and other people from all walks of life.

Kufuor disappointed in Ghana's failure to emerge as Africa's financial hub
 

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South Africa: Dagga Law Challenge Postponed in High Court

The Dagga Party's application to have the prohibition of dagga declared unconstitutional was postponed in the Western Cape High Court on Wednesday.

"We are challenging the constitutionality of the Drugs Act," said Rastafarian Garreth Prince, who lost a previous Constitutional Court attempt at legalising the herb.

"This is not about whether drugs are harmful or not. It is about freedom of choice," said Prince.

"We don't criminalise alcohol or tobacco," he added.

The postponement was to give the State time to analyse a report on current cannabis policy in South Africa.

The parties will return to court on December 13.

Life completely changed

Prince's career as a lawyer was destroyed when the Cape Law Society would not admit him because he had a student conviction for possession of drugs.


Fourteen years ago, his lawyers argued in the Constitutional Court that, as a Rastafarian, he used dagga for spiritual and religious purposes.

He lost the case and has since gone on to become a legal advisor.

"It changed my life completely. I can only give people legal advice and help them to prepare for a case. I cannot go into court and represent them," he said, his dreadlocks hanging onto his navy blue suit.



The Dagga Party is challenging the constitutionality of the Criminal Prohibition of Dagga Act (sections 4(b) and 5(c), read with certain sections of Part III of Schedule 2 of the Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act.

Those sections make it a crime to possess a drug, unless it is for a variety of medical reasons.

Drug Act outdated

The Drugs and Trafficking Act defines what constitutes a drug.


The application got underway after the arrest of a number of people who openly use dagga for spiritual and health reasons, including Dagga Party leader Jeremy Acton, who was arrested for possession.

Acton wants the prosecution against him stopped, pending the Constitutional Court's ruling on his application.

This would be in line with a similar case in Krugersdorp, Gauteng, where prosecution was stopped pending an application to a High Court on constitutional grounds.

The applicants believe that sections of the Drugs Act are unconstitutional, outdated and the product of unscientific propaganda, and are now part of a defunct racist and political agenda.

The application is against the ministers of justice, social development, international relations, police, health, and trade and industry.

Source: News24




South Africa
Zuma Takes 'Spy Tapes' Fight to Appeal Court
President Jacob Zuma has filed papers in the Supreme Court of Appeal in Bloemfontein, challenging a court ruling that he… Read more »


Read this report on News24Wire.com

Ridiculous, I use lion's tail as a tea sometimes and its a very relaxing herb, been using for a while and never developed any problems from it.

Africa also grows some of the best non-hybrid sativa strains known to man, durban poison, kilimanjaro, malawi gold etc, I can only imagine the economic impact legalizing both would bring throughout the continent.
 

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Ivory Coast cocoa farmers seek gold in face of drought

September 4, 2016 by Christophe Koffi

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While cocoa remains the main export commodity, Ivorian authorities are keen to develop the mining industry, which at present accounts for just five percent of the gross domestic product

Once a cocoa planter, Ferdinand Konan Yao has joined the ranks of fellow farmers who have abandoned Ivory Coast's top cash crop to work in clandestine gold mines buried deep in the plantations.

"It hasn't rained for more than five years and cocoa's no longer worth anything," said Yao, sporting a cowboy hat.

Ivory Coast is the world's leading cocoa exporter but it is the prospect of striking gold that is luring diggers from neighbouring Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea.

They come to seek their fortunes in dozens of small unlicensed mines scattered over a radius of more than 300 kilometres (185 miles) in the central Nzi-Comoe region.

The work has also attracted thousands of cocoa planters, whose forebears had accomplished Ivory Coast's first "economic miracle" in the 1970s by hoisting the nation to top of the cocoa export list, ahead of other producers in Africa, Latin America and Asia.

Each morning, small groups of "peasant-miners" head across the wooded savannah carrying pickaxes, shovels and hoes to search for gold.

At work sites, broad trenches have been dug in the middle of plantations and uprooted trees lie in craters. The task of looking for gold is mobilising all able-bodied people from the former "cocoa belt".

At Boore, a village of 2,000 inhabitants in the central Dimbokro region, cocoa planter turned gold panner Octave Kouamee Konan openly regrets the destruction of an orchard.

"We were forced to do it," says the father of five children, seated on a felled tree trunk. "We had to choose between dying of hunger or feeding the family."

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A gold-digger digs into a field in the village of Boore, next to the central town of Dimbokro

"In one week, I earn the equivalent of a year's cocoa harvest," he says.

Severe climate change that has struck the region is often blamed for the widespread abandonment of cocoa in favour of gold.

"Crops in this rich agricultural region are dependent on rainfall, which used to be abundant," Felix Kouassi, departmental director of agriculture in Bocanda, a regional town of more than 200,000 people, told AFP.

"The seasons have been out of whack for several years," Kouassi added. "In August we waited for the rains to get in a good harvest of yams and rice, but there has been none for several weeks."

State shuts 200 informal mines

At the end of a working day, nuggets are sold on site to dealers from Burkina Faso, Mali, Guinea and Lebanon for 20,000 CFA francs (about 31 euros) per gram. The earnings are shared out between the miner, the landowner and the person who loans the tools.

While cocoa remains the main export commodity, Ivorian authorities are keen to develop the mining industry, which at present accounts for just five percent of the gross domestic product.

Official industrial production of gold in Ivory Coast rose by 15 percent in 2015, reaching 23.5 tonnes compared with 20 tonnes the previous year. The steadily growing output relies on five mining operations.

The country's gold reserves are estimated at 600 tonnes, a figure that could be higher if prospecting by several companies bears fruit in the future.

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Ivory Coast's gold reserves are estimated at 600 tonnes, a figure that could be higher if prospecting by several companies bears fruit in the future

But official production could be undermined by clandestine operations "on an enormous scale", according to an expert who referred to a study currently under way.

"It's a big challenge that Africa faces. Not only (Ivory Coast)," said Dennis Mark Bristow, the South African boss of Randgold Resources, whose company runs the largest mine in the country, at Tongon.

The biggest gold mine in neighbouring Ghana, at Oboassi, has been closed because of damage done by clandestine activity, Bristow notes.

To prevent such trouble, the Ivorian government has launched a "national programme for the rationalisation of gold mining", which led to the closure of 200 clandestine pits in the north and centre of the country.

This programme aims to "raise awareness among traditional chiefs and villagers who see gold washing as a source of income without evaluating the consequences", Minister of Industry and Mines Jean-Claude Brou recently said.

Alongside government measures, industrialists plan a unit for small-scale gold production, with "allocated corridors" and "work under some kind of law", Bristow said.

At present, illegal miners have turned from using mercury to cyanide in processing gold, he added. "They take the gold and leave the country. They are employing child labour, they don't abide by labour laws."

"It's important to work not to criminalise the project but to normalise it," Bristow added, stressing the commitment of mining firms listed on the London and New York stock exchanges to finding solutions and protecting the environment.

Explore further:
South Africa launches plan to curb rampant TB in gold mines



Ivory Coast cocoa farmers seek gold in face of drought
 
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Botswana, Mozambique and Zimbabwe plan to build railway

SEPTEMBER 5TH, 2016
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The governments of Botswana, Mozambique and Zimbabwe on Friday signed a partnership document for construction of a railway of over 1,700 kilometres through all three countries to facilitate trade, reported Zimbabwe’s Chronicle newspaper.

The document was signed in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, by the Minister of Transport and Development Infrastructure of Zimbabwe, Joram Gumbo, the Minister for Transport and Communications of Mozambique, Carlos Alberto Mesquita and the Minister for Minerals, Energy and Water Resources of Botswana, Onkokane Kitso Mokaila.

Around 1,500 kilometres of the railway will be located in Zimbabwe and there will be 100 kilometres in both Botswana and Mozambique. Each government will provide US$200 million in funding and seek to establish a public-private partnership for the project given its size.

Joram Gumbo said he hoped the project will improve the distribution of regional traffic, increase regional integration and international cooperation and will be another part of a regional transport network.

The railway, which will end in Mozambique at Ponta Techobanine where a sea port will be built, should, according to the stakeholders, facilitate investment in mining, logistics and industry. (macauhub/MZ)

Botswana, Mozambique and Zimbabwe plan to build railway
 

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POLITICS
Smartphone activism as agency in Zimbabwe
SHONA KAMBARANI





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Robert Mugabe on a Zanu PF poster during the 2008 election period. Image Credit: Babak Fakhamzadeh via Flickr.
Late last week, President Robert Mugabe mocked the protest movement that has risen against his governance over the past few months. “Enough is enough,” the President declared, ordering the judiciary to fall in line with government policy, a move widely thought to be authoritarian and a threat to the separation of powers. The phrase “enough is enough” was not accidental. In using it, the President co-opted the slogan-cum-hashtag used by protestors, referencing the movement without naming it.

Earlier this summer, news from Zimbabwe was dominated by seemingly non-partisan protests against Mugabe’s government and the ruling ZANU-PF. The figurehead of these protests was a Baptist pastor, Evan Mawarire, who took to YouTube to express a deep affection for his country and an even deeper frustration with the governance of Zimbabwe. Mawarire’s video, entitled ‘This Flag’, which has been posted on multiple apps, remixed, debated and reported on, has somehow spurred a movement across social media channels that has resulted in the largest sustained protests against bad governance in the country since 2008.

Perhaps when history is eventually written as a series of tweets, a la BuzzFeed, we will come to truly recognize the revolutionary nature and power of the smart phone. But until then, traditional journalism and analysis demands that every time a population uses the tools available to them to voice their frustrations and concerns as a collective, we have to answer the question: “Can social media activism change a country?”

In Zimbabwe, the leap from online conversation to citizen protest has followed the same path as other protest movements around the world. The protests have always come first, the hashtag has followed, and in this case the protests have grown.

Among different, floundering attempts to discredit the protest movement, the most curious tactic employed by the Zimbabwean government has been the state-organized, pro-government protests designed to counter the narrative that the popular uprising is popular at all. Many of these protests have involved recruiting Zanu-PF’s youth wing, a ruling party organization, as well as bussing in rural Zimbabweans to enhance the numbers attending.

The question then, has been asked: are rural Zimbabwean’s pro-Mugabe? Consensus amongst the commentary class seems to be “yes”, the implication being that social media-led protest movements are urban phenomena and are not representative of the rural majority of the country. The narrative suggests that rural Zimbabweans are generally pro-Mugabe, and that urbanites erroneously elevate their current grievances above the ultimate crime against the country that was colonialism.

This analysis is frustrating, if only because it is not nuanced. It assumes a lack of intellectual sophistication and agency in the rural population without evidence to support such claims. It is difficult to say how genuine rural support for the ruling party is. Perhaps the tradition of rural support of the current government is ongoing, however predating the 2009 election, evidence revealed that blind loyalty to the government is no longer the status quo. For as much as the rural population has been the majority of Zanu PF support, the base has had to be coaxed, nurtured, and often times beaten, into alignment.

It is possible that the distinction between voluntary and involuntary political support is insignificant in electoral terms, but it is worth highlighting when the discussion turns to social media and the current protest moment. If rural presence in pro-government “counter protests” is rallied as a form of self preservation against physical violence and economic retribution for non-participation, social media channels, like the almost ubiquitous Facebook instant-messaging entity WhatsApp, provide an outlet to say what you really think.

In the “mobile economy” narrative in which mobile technology is “sweeping across Africa” and revolutionizing communication and banking all over the continent, it seems an improbable argument that social media movements are not penetrating the rural population. It is cognitive dissonance to simultaneously claim that “mobile phones have begun providing a means of communication, connecting Zimbabwe’s rural population with urban dwellers” and that a movement that is being kept alive through social media is somehow a solely urban phenomenon.

In a country with a mobile penetration of 97 percent, perhaps the anonymity of social media profiles and the protection of end-end encrypted instant messaging allows for the first public glimpse of the real leanings of all Zimbabweans, including the rural majority.

Smartphone activism as agency in Zimbabwe
 

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India, Namibia discuss joint ventures in mining, solar projects, tourism

Updated: September 7, 2016 18:20 IST | Our Bureau

Namibia has asked India for assistance in manufacturing of fertiliser and vaccines.

It has also called for joint ventures with India in mining and exploration.

In the third session of the India-Namibia joint trade committee meeting on Wednesday, the two countries also agreed to cooperate in development of hydro-projects and water resource management, according to an official release.

"The Namibian side encouraged joint ventures in mining and mineral exploration, trade of precious and semi-precious gems and stones and development of skills through training in gems & jewellery to encourage local value addition," the release said.

Cooperation in tourism was also discussed and the two countries decided on an agreement to facilitate joint training and development of tourist destinations.

India, Namibia discuss joint ventures in mining, solar projects, tourism
 

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Tanzania, Nigeria and the EU: Free trade discord

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By RICK ROWDEN
From the African Union and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) to the European Union and African countries’ trade and development ministers, nearly everyone agrees that African economies must industrialise.

Yet despite this broad consensus, when it comes down to the specific policies needed there remains widespread disagreement. The recent refusals of Nigeria and Tanzania to sign on to the EU’s proposed free trade deals, or Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs), are the starkest manifestation of diverging agendas.

Nigeria has consistently opposed the EPA for west Africa. However Tanzania’s last minute decision in July to back away from the EPA for the East African Community region stunned European negotiators.

Most African countries currently have duty free access to the EU single market for their goods under several iterations of the Lomé Convention. The new EPAs would, within a decade, give similar tariff-free access for about 80 percent of EU exports into African markets.

Europe has warned that African economies could lose Lomé preferences if EPA deals are not concluded.

So why the reticence?

Part of the answer links back to the drive for industrialisation. Both Nigeria and Tanzania recently adopted ambitious industrialisation plans, and new governments in both countries appear more genuine in their desire to implement them.

And in both, policymakers claim the rules and restrictions in the proposed EPAs would undermine these strategies.

The popularity of free trade over the last 30 years has made it standard for donor agencies and trade negotiators from rich countries to press developing countries to adopt free trade. The EPAs follow on these assumptions.

Nigeria and Tanzania appear to be questioning the prevailing wisdom. Instead, they are looking to the historical record.

Contrary to today’s free trade ethos, many economic historians point to a basic rule of thumb. In cases as diverse as the UK, Europe, the US, Japan, South Korea and China, today’s rich countries only lowered their trade barriers once domestic manufacturing had become competitive in world markets – not before.

Contrary to the current popularity of the notion of comparative advantage for development – the idea that under free trade countries will benefit by specialising in producing goods they can offer at a lower cost than competitors – historical best practices from today’s rich countries show that it is not a good idea to only focus on agricultural and extractive industries. These tend to suffer from diminishing returns over time.

Diversifying into manufacturing and services can provide increasing returns. To do so successfully, many industrialised nations intervened aggressively in their economies and trade relations using a variety of industrial policy tools.

Many of these have since been discouraged or forbidden by today’s free trade consensus.

Today, industrial policy is still, in many circles, a dirty word. But industrial intervention cannot be fully written off as a failed concept. Industrial policies in Africa and Latin America in the 1960s and 1970s typically failed because they were applied inappropriately, driven by corruption or were too inwardly focused on small domestic markets, neglecting the need to develop international competitiveness.

By contrast, east Asian countries developed strong institutions that enforced strict rules for industry subsidies and trade protection. These got cut off from them when they failed to meet performance targets. Their industrialisation strategies were internationally oriented.

These examples should tell global policymakers more about how industrial policies should be implemented — not if they should be implemented at all.

To get industrial policy right, Nigeria and Tanzania need to build new institutions with more independent actors empowered to play an enforcement role – as was done successfully in east Asia.

Of course, the world has changed dramatically since the UK, Europe and the US industrialised in the 19th century. But evolving the policies that worked for the 21st century seems more beneficial than phasing them out altogether.

Protecting new industries

The main reason cited by Tanzanian and Nigerian officials for rejecting the EPAs – that they would block industrialisation – are consistent with these historical lessons.

Not only do officials worry that the EPA’s proposed tariff reductions would pose a drain on vital revenues needed for annual budgets, but both countries are concerned that dropping tariffs would destroy local industries – a view supported by research by think tanks such as the Wilson Centre.

“Our experts have established that the way it has been crafted, the EPA will not benefit local industries in east Africa. Instead it will lead to their destruction as developed countries are likely to dominate the market,” Tanzania’s foreign affairs permanent secretary Aziz Mlim stated.

Tanzania also points to a rule in the proposed EPA that would outlaw its use of export taxes on raw materials. This would deny them a standard industrial policy that was used by all of the rich countries to keep raw materials at home and available for use by domestic manufacturers.

For example, Tanzania banned exports of mineral sands from gold mining on August 1. This is permitted under World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules, but would not be allowed under the EPA.

Rather than exporting the sands – to be processed into tin, copper and silver abroad – Tanzanian president John Magufuli called for processing plants to be built in Tanzania and to further develop markets for copper and silver.

Indeed, a number of EU trade policies are quite clear in their intent to use trade deals such as the EPAs to open up access to raw materials for use by European high-tech manufacturers.

There is also the issue of African regional economic integration. While the EU claims the EPAs would support the region’s integration, others disagree, including former Tanzanian president Benjamin Mkapa. He fears that locking in old North-South trade flows under the EPAs wouldundermine recent efforts at building new South-South regional trade ties.

Drawing on data that shows African countries buy more manufactured goods from one another than do others (most of the EAC’s exports to the EU are primary commodities), Mr Mkapa says that inter-African trade is far more important for the region’s aspirations to industrialise. “The EU market plays almost no role in this,” he concludes.

Nigeria’s concerns are similar. President Muhammadu Buhari recently reiterated his belief that EPA rules work against the national industrialisation strategy during a special session of the European Parliament in February.

Nigeria does not need an EPA “until it has been adequately industrialised and [is] able to trade industrial goods competitively”, Frank Jacobs, president of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, emphasised in a recent interview.

For now, it appears that the impasse is set to continue. Tanzania and Nigeria are determined to take a different approach – using trade protection first, then adopting free trade later. Their next moves will be watched closely.

Tanzania, Nigeria and the EU: Free trade discord - This is Africa
 

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Tanzania, Nigeria and the EU: Free trade discord

Tanzania-Nigeria-and-the-EU-Free-trade-discord_main_article.jpg

By RICK ROWDEN
From the African Union and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) to the European Union and African countries’ trade and development ministers, nearly everyone agrees that African economies must industrialise.

Yet despite this broad consensus, when it comes down to the specific policies needed there remains widespread disagreement. The recent refusals of Nigeria and Tanzania to sign on to the EU’s proposed free trade deals, or Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs), are the starkest manifestation of diverging agendas.

Nigeria has consistently opposed the EPA for west Africa. However Tanzania’s last minute decision in July to back away from the EPA for the East African Community region stunned European negotiators.

Most African countries currently have duty free access to the EU single market for their goods under several iterations of the Lomé Convention. The new EPAs would, within a decade, give similar tariff-free access for about 80 percent of EU exports into African markets.

Europe has warned that African economies could lose Lomé preferences if EPA deals are not concluded.

So why the reticence?

Part of the answer links back to the drive for industrialisation. Both Nigeria and Tanzania recently adopted ambitious industrialisation plans, and new governments in both countries appear more genuine in their desire to implement them.

And in both, policymakers claim the rules and restrictions in the proposed EPAs would undermine these strategies.

The popularity of free trade over the last 30 years has made it standard for donor agencies and trade negotiators from rich countries to press developing countries to adopt free trade. The EPAs follow on these assumptions.

Nigeria and Tanzania appear to be questioning the prevailing wisdom. Instead, they are looking to the historical record.

Contrary to today’s free trade ethos, many economic historians point to a basic rule of thumb. In cases as diverse as the UK, Europe, the US, Japan, South Korea and China, today’s rich countries only lowered their trade barriers once domestic manufacturing had become competitive in world markets – not before.

Contrary to the current popularity of the notion of comparative advantage for development – the idea that under free trade countries will benefit by specialising in producing goods they can offer at a lower cost than competitors – historical best practices from today’s rich countries show that it is not a good idea to only focus on agricultural and extractive industries. These tend to suffer from diminishing returns over time.

Diversifying into manufacturing and services can provide increasing returns. To do so successfully, many industrialised nations intervened aggressively in their economies and trade relations using a variety of industrial policy tools.

Many of these have since been discouraged or forbidden by today’s free trade consensus.

Today, industrial policy is still, in many circles, a dirty word. But industrial intervention cannot be fully written off as a failed concept. Industrial policies in Africa and Latin America in the 1960s and 1970s typically failed because they were applied inappropriately, driven by corruption or were too inwardly focused on small domestic markets, neglecting the need to develop international competitiveness.

By contrast, east Asian countries developed strong institutions that enforced strict rules for industry subsidies and trade protection. These got cut off from them when they failed to meet performance targets. Their industrialisation strategies were internationally oriented.

These examples should tell global policymakers more about how industrial policies should be implemented — not if they should be implemented at all.

To get industrial policy right, Nigeria and Tanzania need to build new institutions with more independent actors empowered to play an enforcement role – as was done successfully in east Asia.

Of course, the world has changed dramatically since the UK, Europe and the US industrialised in the 19th century. But evolving the policies that worked for the 21st century seems more beneficial than phasing them out altogether.

Protecting new industries

The main reason cited by Tanzanian and Nigerian officials for rejecting the EPAs – that they would block industrialisation – are consistent with these historical lessons.

Not only do officials worry that the EPA’s proposed tariff reductions would pose a drain on vital revenues needed for annual budgets, but both countries are concerned that dropping tariffs would destroy local industries – a view supported by research by think tanks such as the Wilson Centre.

“Our experts have established that the way it has been crafted, the EPA will not benefit local industries in east Africa. Instead it will lead to their destruction as developed countries are likely to dominate the market,” Tanzania’s foreign affairs permanent secretary Aziz Mlim stated.

Tanzania also points to a rule in the proposed EPA that would outlaw its use of export taxes on raw materials. This would deny them a standard industrial policy that was used by all of the rich countries to keep raw materials at home and available for use by domestic manufacturers.

For example, Tanzania banned exports of mineral sands from gold mining on August 1. This is permitted under World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules, but would not be allowed under the EPA.

Rather than exporting the sands – to be processed into tin, copper and silver abroad – Tanzanian president John Magufuli called for processing plants to be built in Tanzania and to further develop markets for copper and silver.

Indeed, a number of EU trade policies are quite clear in their intent to use trade deals such as the EPAs to open up access to raw materials for use by European high-tech manufacturers.

There is also the issue of African regional economic integration. While the EU claims the EPAs would support the region’s integration, others disagree, including former Tanzanian president Benjamin Mkapa. He fears that locking in old North-South trade flows under the EPAs wouldundermine recent efforts at building new South-South regional trade ties.

Drawing on data that shows African countries buy more manufactured goods from one another than do others (most of the EAC’s exports to the EU are primary commodities), Mr Mkapa says that inter-African trade is far more important for the region’s aspirations to industrialise. “The EU market plays almost no role in this,” he concludes.

Nigeria’s concerns are similar. President Muhammadu Buhari recently reiterated his belief that EPA rules work against the national industrialisation strategy during a special session of the European Parliament in February.

Nigeria does not need an EPA “until it has been adequately industrialised and [is] able to trade industrial goods competitively”, Frank Jacobs, president of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, emphasised in a recent interview.

For now, it appears that the impasse is set to continue. Tanzania and Nigeria are determined to take a different approach – using trade protection first, then adopting free trade later. Their next moves will be watched closely.

Tanzania, Nigeria and the EU: Free trade discord - This is Africa

One of the few things Buhari has done right :ehh:
 

Scientific Playa

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something different. chatty patty stuff but flip it, she's one of the all time queens of nollywood Meet ‘Nollywood’: The second largest movie industry in the world

Why Genevieve Nnaji's Private Wedding To NBA Agent Fiance, Ugo Udezue Was Cancelled
Popular Nollywood actress, Genevieve Nnaji has been left heartbroken in Milan after her Igbo fiance reportedly cancelled their private wedding at the last minute.



Nollywood actress, Genevieve Nnaji has lost her chance of marrying this year because her secret lover has called off their wedding.

Unknown to many, the pretty Nollywood single mother sparked off a secret romance with Ugochukwu Udezue, a wealthy NBA basketball agent based in Denver, Colorado last year.

He reportedly proposed to her around the time she was seen flaunting a huge engagement ring on her official Instagram page.

Miss Nnaji and the Mr Udezue were supposed to get married in Milan Italy about two weeks ago but the groom cancelled the wedding at the last minute and returned to Amsterdam, dumping the actress and her guests. On why he cancelled the wedding at the last minute, Udezue reportedly told his friends that he doesn’t trust Miss Nnaji after she chose to make the wedding private.

Secondly, his father has refused to give his blessing because of Genevieve Nnaji’s suspicious demand of not wanting close family members at the wedding.

It was further disclosed that Ugo’s dad also refused to attend the event nor give his blessing.

Months before the wedding, Genevieve Nnaji reportedly begged Udezue to keep the wedding ceremony a low-key one. She even went as far as not telling any member of her family nor her colleagues.

She only left Nigeria with her best friend Oluchi Orlandi and few other friends.

According to sources, Mr Udezue thought Miss Nnaji has something to hide that was why she didn’t bother to invite her parents to the wedding ceremony scheduled for Milan.

This and his father’s refusal forced Mr Udezue to call off the wedding.

Actress-Genevieve-Nnaji-Ugo-Udezue-3.jpg


Actress-Genevieve-Nnaji-Ugo-Udezue-4.jpg


Actress-Genevieve-Nnaji-Ugo-Udezue-5.jpg


Actress-Genevieve-Nnaji-Ugo-Udezue-1.jpg


The source said Miss Nnaji was put to shame on her wedding day and was forced to return to Nigeria without the wedding ring she’s been dreaming of. Mr Udezue is the founder of African Basketball League. He is one of the most popular Nigerian NBA agents in the United States. According to our source, Udezue has four kids from his previous marriages.

It is still unsure if Genevieve Nnaji and the wealthy Basketball agent have called off their relationship.

Meanwhile, the actress is currently in Canada where she is attending the TIFF with other popular actors and producers.

Why Genevieve Nnaji's Private Wedding To NBA Agent Fiance, Ugo Udezue Was Cancelled - Gistmania
 

Yehuda

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something different. chatty patty stuff but flip it, she's one of the all time queens of nollywood Meet ‘Nollywood’: The second largest movie industry in the world

Why Genevieve Nnaji's Private Wedding To NBA Agent Fiance, Ugo Udezue Was Cancelled
Popular Nollywood actress, Genevieve Nnaji has been left heartbroken in Milan after her Igbo fiance reportedly cancelled their private wedding at the last minute.



Nollywood actress, Genevieve Nnaji has lost her chance of marrying this year because her secret lover has called off their wedding.

Unknown to many, the pretty Nollywood single mother sparked off a secret romance with Ugochukwu Udezue, a wealthy NBA basketball agent based in Denver, Colorado last year.

He reportedly proposed to her around the time she was seen flaunting a huge engagement ring on her official Instagram page.

Miss Nnaji and the Mr Udezue were supposed to get married in Milan Italy about two weeks ago but the groom cancelled the wedding at the last minute and returned to Amsterdam, dumping the actress and her guests. On why he cancelled the wedding at the last minute, Udezue reportedly told his friends that he doesn’t trust Miss Nnaji after she chose to make the wedding private.

Secondly, his father has refused to give his blessing because of Genevieve Nnaji’s suspicious demand of not wanting close family members at the wedding.

It was further disclosed that Ugo’s dad also refused to attend the event nor give his blessing.

Months before the wedding, Genevieve Nnaji reportedly begged Udezue to keep the wedding ceremony a low-key one. She even went as far as not telling any member of her family nor her colleagues.

She only left Nigeria with her best friend Oluchi Orlandi and few other friends.

According to sources, Mr Udezue thought Miss Nnaji has something to hide that was why she didn’t bother to invite her parents to the wedding ceremony scheduled for Milan.

This and his father’s refusal forced Mr Udezue to call off the wedding.

Actress-Genevieve-Nnaji-Ugo-Udezue-3.jpg


Actress-Genevieve-Nnaji-Ugo-Udezue-4.jpg


Actress-Genevieve-Nnaji-Ugo-Udezue-5.jpg


Actress-Genevieve-Nnaji-Ugo-Udezue-1.jpg


The source said Miss Nnaji was put to shame on her wedding day and was forced to return to Nigeria without the wedding ring she’s been dreaming of. Mr Udezue is the founder of African Basketball League. He is one of the most popular Nigerian NBA agents in the United States. According to our source, Udezue has four kids from his previous marriages.

It is still unsure if Genevieve Nnaji and the wealthy Basketball agent have called off their relationship.

Meanwhile, the actress is currently in Canada where she is attending the TIFF with other popular actors and producers.

Why Genevieve Nnaji's Private Wedding To NBA Agent Fiance, Ugo Udezue Was Cancelled - Gistmania

She's mad pretty.
 
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