Essential The Africa the Media Doesn't Tell You About

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Goodbye blackouts? New electricity company registered in Malawi

By Archangel Nzangaya

Amid continuing blackouts in the country, government has now registered a new energy company which will be generating power in Malawi.

According to Minister of Energy, Mining and Natural Resources Bright Msaka the new company is EGN co.

Msaka said the company will be producing electricity while Electricity Supply Corporation of Malawi (Escom) will just be buying the energy from EGN co for distribution to consumers.

Bright-Msaka.jpg

Has confirmed the news: Msaka​

“We have now incorporated a new power producing company called EGN co. It is now an independent company of the mainstream Escom.”

“The company will be responsible for production issues and it will be in charge of Nkula, Tedzani, Kapichira falls plus other smaller installations,” said Msaka.

The minister added that EGN co will also continue introducing new projects of power generation with the aim of reducing blackouts.

The development comes months after Parliament passed an electricity amendment bill aimed at bringing more players into the power sector by reducing the roles of Escom.

After the unbundling is complete, Escom will only be responsible for buying of electricity from private companies, as well as transportation and distribution of the power to all parts of the country.

Government hopes the unbundling of the electricity supplier will reduce blackouts in the country.
 

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Afropreneurs: Essie Bartels Aims to Be West Africa’s Premier Culinary Ambassador with Essiespice

essiespice2-960x960.jpg

Photo courtesy of Essie Bartels.

09.22.16

by AKINYI OCHIENG

After living on three continents and traveling across 25 countries, there’s one place where Essie Bartels has always felt at home—the kitchen.

Growing up, she helped her mother and grandmother with dinner, and developed her own stovetop experiments for her father, who graded her on a scale from 1 to 10. “There were a lot of “9’s” and “10’s,” but every so often I’d get a “5,” which only made me try harder,” she laughs.

When she moved to the United States to attend college, she continued cooking for friends who soon encouraged her to think of starting her own business. But with only a little bit of capital, she wondered what to do. “I didn’t see myself having a restaurant, but I did see a gap in the market for spices and other condiments,” she says. “I already pre-made sauces at home to make cooking easier for myself, so launching a spice company seemed like the logical way to enter the food market.”

essiespice1.jpg

Photo courtesy of Essie Bartels.

Essiespice, her eponymous spices and sauces brand, launched in 2013 following two years of researching and refining recipes. Today, the company has four signature multi-purpose blends: Tamarind Oh!, CoCo-for-Garlic, Mekko Dry Rub, and Mango Chili Medley, its bestseller.

Fresh ingredients for the product line are sourced from produce distributors in the Tri-State Area in an effort to support local business and reduce Essiespice’s carbon footprint. The uniquely African spice blends come directly from a businesswoman named Hajia Limata in Makola, Accra’s sprawling open-air market.

In two years, demand for Essiespice has doubled as big-box grocery stores like Whole Foods and Shoprite take notice. But it’s been hard to meet demand with limited resources.

“Essiespice is a labor of love—I depend on my family and friends to help me on production days,” the spice mixologist says. “We rent out an industrial kitchen and get to chopping and blending to produce the deliciousness that is Essiespice, but it’s hard to meet demand because production is contingent on their schedules.”

Earlier this year, Bartels lost her corporate job. While transitioning to working on Essiespice without the cushion of a full-time salary may have been daunting, the shift turned out to be a blessing in disguise. “Since losing my job, I finally have the time, patience, and energy to fully devote myself to nurturing my brand. No one can be a better advocate for your business than you can—especially at the early stages of a company,” she says.

essiebartelsinsta.jpg

Photo courtesy of Essie Bartels.

Now, to help take her business to the next level, she launched a Indiegogo campaign to raise $48,000 to expand production, staff, and research and development. The campaign features a wide range of rewards that give a preview of future Essiespice products: hand-stitched aprons made with Malian Bogolan fabric and brass Adinkra symbols, pottery made from red earth sourced in Kumasi, Ghana and even cooking classes with Essie herself.

In the next few years, she also hopes to expand her product line to include signature Essiespice milks, nuts, butters, and oils inspired by the flavors of Africa and its diaspora. She’s also in talks with farmers in Ghana’s Northern Region to introduce ancient grains like millet, sorghum, and fonio, which have high nutritional value, but aren’t widely available in global markets.

With endorsements from culinary heavy hitters including Pierre Thiam, Africa’s leading celebrity chef, and support from Nyema Tubman, President of Sundial Brands—the makers of crowd favorites Shea Moisture and Nubian Heritage—Bartels aims to be one of West Africa’s premier culinary ambassadors.

“African food isn’t visible enough on the global stage,” she says. “Our voices aren’t heard, so I want to contribute to that conversation so that things like millet and dawa dawa are recognizable in the same way as spaghetti or curry powder. Many studies have shown that West Africans have some of the healthiest diets in the world, so we should see our food represented more on television and in magazines.”

Afropreneurs: Essie Bartels Aims to Be West Africa’s Premier Culinary Ambassador with Essiespice
 

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How African governments are increasingly clamping down on the internet to control their citizenry

22 SEP 2016 10:51WILLIAM GUMEDE

2210
The UN, must introduce stronger measures against African leaders and governments who censor social media, activists and the internet, in order to muzzle opposition against poor democratic governance.


African governments are increasingly clamping down on the internet, especially social media, as well as messaging applications, in an attempt to silence democratic opposition, civil society and activists mobilising against poor governance.

Technology has made it increasingly possible for Africans across the continent to distribute and receive alternative sources of information to government propaganda and disinformation and has made secrecy more difficult.

Since independence, most African governments have monopolised old media, such as newspapers and public broadcasters, to give their versions of what is happening in their countries. Many autocrats have manipulated the flow of information, either through propaganda on state-owned media or by withholding information that would show citizens the true extent of their incompetence, misrule and corruption.

Government critics, opposition and civil society groups are often prevented from giving the full picture or alternative perspectives on state-owned media.

However, the proliferation of cellphones has allowed for new media platforms, especially where the old media are firmly controlled by governments. It has opened new ways to produce and distribute independent information to mass audiences, normally accessed only by government media.

The North African “Arab Spring” protests of 2011 and 2012 by young people against corrupt ruling parties and leaders are cases in point. During the “revolutions”, young people used social media to organise protests and support movements to make their voices heard in ways not possible before, when they were barred from official state media.

New sources of alternative information, which are becoming available to Africans across the continent, break undemocratic governments and leaders’ stranglehold on information flow and will be a powerful force for better governance in the future.

Many African countries are aware of the liberating power of the internet and social media and are increasingly censoring these platforms and those using them. Online publications are routinely closed down and bloggers and social media activists are imprisoned for criticising governments. Many African governments are monitoring and intercepting e-mail and internet communications to prevent opposition views from spreading.

In many countries, social media are controlled by state-owned companies or, if in private hands, are under the thumb of the state. For example, Ethio Telecom, the state-owned telecommunications monopoly in Ethiopia, has been regularly accused of interrupting connectivity during periods of political protests. Similarly, in Eritrea, the internet is strictly controlled by state-owned company, EriTel, and all ISPs are obliged to use government gateway.

Earlier this year, Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe claimed the opposition was “abusing” social media and the internet to undermine the government.

“We want general technology in our country to be advanced so the mobile phone is not just a feature phone but can be used to discover news, record news and to share with others via apps like WhatsApp. However, there’s a lot of bad stuff on the internet. Some people use the internet in bad ways. It’s everywhere. But the Chinese have put in place security measures and we look at these so that we stop these abuses on the internet,” he said.

The Ethiopian government has regularly blocked social media to prevent it being used to co-ordinate anti-government protests. Protests have engulfed the country since November, particularly in the Oromia region, where residents complain about political and economic marginalisation.

In the general elections in May last year, which opposition parties, civil groups and activists said were rife with irregularities, the governing Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front secured 100 percent of the vote.

During anti-government protests, the Ethiopian government regularly blocked WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger and Twitter. In April, Facebook and Twitter were off-line for almost a month in the Oromia region.

In July, the Ethiopian government shut down the internet after political protests in the country’s Gondar region. Social media applications, such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Viber, stopped working for nearly 24 hours. The government claimed the move was aimed at preventing university students from cheating during entrance exams.

In April, governing party MPs in Egypt proposed new laws to “contain the dangers of Facebook”, claiming comments critical of the government “threatened national security”.

One of the MPs, Gamal Abdel-Nasser, said: “Parliament should move quickly to draft new legislation aimed at containing the excesses of Facebook.

“The West has sold us this Facebook to extort us and launch an assault on our personal and national security freedoms.”

Last year, Egypt blocked Facebook’s Free Basics internet service because the company declined to give the government access to users’ accounts.

The Egyptian government has arrested a number of activists for making critical comments on social media. In April, an arrest warrant was issued for journalist Khaled el-Balshi for allegedly conspiring to overthrow the government, inciting protests and insulting the Interior Ministry after comments on Facebook and Twitter. After civil society pressure, the warrant was cancelled, although the case has not been dropped.

Early this year, the Egyptian government arrested two activists for managing Facebook pages to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Egypt’s Arab Spring uprisings, claiming they were “inciting” protests against the state.

Before the February presidential elections in Uganda, the government shut down social media. President Yoweri Museveni claimed it was to “avert lies” and to prevent the incitement of violence. On voting day, many Ugandans could not tweet or use Facebook. The government also shut down social media during the 2011 elections.

During the 2011 polls, and even more so during this year’s elections, Ugandans extensively used social media to debate issues and mobilise opposition to the government. Many used the hashtag #1986pictures to tweet pictures taken 30 years ago, comparing it to the current situation, to show “in 30 years, everything has changed in Uganda except the president”.

Last year, the Mozambican government slapped criminal charges on Carlos Nuno Castel-Branco and Fernando Mbanze over a Facebook post in 2013 in which they criticised former president Armando Guebuza.

Economist Castel-Branco had written an open letter on Facebook criticising governance under Guebuza.

Mbanze, editor of MediaFax newspaper, published Castel-Branco’s post and was charged with abusing freedom of the press.

In Sudan, internet speeds reportedly slow down during periods of political upheaval, with critics accusing the government of deliberately slowing connectivity. Independent online news outlets are regularly hacked and journalists and activists using social media frequently arrested.

In May, the Nigerian government withdrew its Cybercrime Act of 2015, after strong civil society complaints it undermined freedom of expression.

Last year, South Africa’s Film and Publication Board introduced draft legislation ostensibly to regulate online content, but which in fact introduced far-reaching restrictions, under the guise of regulating sex, violence and hate-speech content. After civil society opposition, the draft was rewritten, to take out some, not all, of the contentious restrictions.

The battle to bring democracy, inclusive development and peace to Africa will be increasingly waged on cellphones, the internet and social media. Autocratic African regimes have fallen due to opposition waged by ordinary citizens through these platforms. It is not surprising, therefore, autocrats would want to restrict them.

In June, the UN Human Rights Council condemned countries shutting down access to the internet to clamp down on anti-government criticisms as a violation of international human rights law.

To boost democracy, inclusive development and peace, regional bodies, such as the AU, and international ones, such as the UN, must introduce stronger measures against African leaders and governments who censor social media, activists and the internet, in order to muzzle opposition against poor democratic governance.

*This article was published on Democracy Works. To view the article on their website click here.

How African governments are increasingly clamping down on the internet to control their citizenry
 

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Guinea-Bissau opens museum in memory of kin sold into slavery




Guinea Bissau has opened a slave memorial museum in the town of Cacheu on the coast of Guinea-Bissau where millions of slaves from West Africa were bound, branded and shipped off to the Americas.

“The idea is to show that Cacheu was the first place where Europeans practised transatlantic slavery on an industrial scale,” said Alfredo Caldeira, who heads the archives of the Mario Soares foundation – named after the late Portuguese president – which helped create the memorial.

The museum hopes to attract tourists keen on history with their commemoration of the exiled sons and daughters and documenting the Portugal’s brutal venture into Africa. Among the items on display are the wooden collars that slaves were bolted into two by two.

“The tourist aspect is important,” said Caldeira. “But the main thing is to allow these people to rediscover a collective memory and dignity.”

Cacheu is home to fewer than 10 000 people today, but was the capital of Portugal’s former colony from the 16th century on-wards, trading in people until the late 19th century.



The Cacheu memorial site took three years of work by Portuguese architects to establish the impressive structure that hopes for success of the same kind as the neighbouring Senegal’s celebrated Goree Island, another Atlantic “point of no return” for slaves that has become a must-see for visiting heads of state and celebrities.

The European Union donated $579 000 to the Cacheu project, 90 percent of its total cost, with the specific aim of increasing the cultural potential of such sites as a source of sustainable income for the country according to an AFP report

Guinea-Bissau opens museum in memory of kin sold into slavery
 

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Zimbabwean remittance scheme 'laudable'
bc750836-060f-43f2-8f91-a8c75a0f6d56.jpg



Brian Hungwe

BBC Africa, Harare

Posted at9:08

Zimbabweans have been protesting that their money has become worthless
With Zimbabwe's sources of revenue drying up, the government is now focusing on remittances from the diaspora in an attempt to ease the cash crunch that many people are facing.

Exporting firms are in decline, and the manufacturing sector has shrunk by 90%.

The government has now come up with a Diaspora Remittances Incentive Scheme which comes into effect next month.

The aim is to encourage remittances to be sent through regulated firms, with the government pledging a bonus payment of 5%, to be split between the receiver and the transfer agent.

While the scheme is laudable, it reveals a level of desperation as the country struggles to boost revenue inflows.

Foreign direct investment remains low, mainly because of unfavourable investment laws and property rights violations.

With fears around the move to introduce so-called bond notes, a local version of the US dollar, many are sending money through unreliable and unsafe methods.

There are an estimated three million Zimbabweans abroad, many of them in neighbouring states like South Africa.

Many of them have taken to giving cash to people who are crossing the border to deliver it on their behalf, which can be an unreliable approach.

Africa Live: Zimbabwe to target diaspora's cash, South Africa 'ungovernable' threat - BBC News
 

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Zimbabwean remittance scheme 'laudable'
bc750836-060f-43f2-8f91-a8c75a0f6d56.jpg



Brian Hungwe

BBC Africa, Harare

Posted at9:08

Zimbabweans have been protesting that their money has become worthless
With Zimbabwe's sources of revenue drying up, the government is now focusing on remittances from the diaspora in an attempt to ease the cash crunch that many people are facing.

Exporting firms are in decline, and the manufacturing sector has shrunk by 90%.

The government has now come up with a Diaspora Remittances Incentive Scheme which comes into effect next month.

The aim is to encourage remittances to be sent through regulated firms, with the government pledging a bonus payment of 5%, to be split between the receiver and the transfer agent.

While the scheme is laudable, it reveals a level of desperation as the country struggles to boost revenue inflows.

Foreign direct investment remains low, mainly because of unfavourable investment laws and property rights violations.

With fears around the move to introduce so-called bond notes, a local version of the US dollar, many are sending money through unreliable and unsafe methods.

There are an estimated three million Zimbabweans abroad, many of them in neighbouring states like South Africa.

Many of them have taken to giving cash to people who are crossing the border to deliver it on their behalf, which can be an unreliable approach.

Africa Live: Zimbabwe to target diaspora's cash, South Africa 'ungovernable' threat - BBC News

Yea that will work :skip:
 

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China to help Mozambique establish industrial park

Source: Xinhua | 2016-09-24 17:49:40 | Editor: huaxia

CnbbeeE005004_20160924_NBMFN0A001_11n.jpg

Chinese engineers go about their work at the Maputo-Catembe Bridge in Maputo, Mozambique, June 7, 2015. The Maputo-Catembe Bridge and its link roads, under loans of China EximBank, are likely to become one of the largest suspension bridges in Africa with a main span of 680 meters, leading to a substantial increase in economic, business and tourism development of the southern part of the bay after its completion in 2017. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

MAPUTO, Sept. 24 (Xinhua) -- China will help Mozambique establish an industrial park as an effort to increase job opportunities in the southern African country, according to Chinese Ambassador Su Jian.

Ambassador Su told Mozambican Prime Minister Carlos Agostinho do Rosario on Wednesday in Maputo that China is willing to continue supporting the country in different domains including increasing job opportunities through the establishment of an industrial park.

The ambassador said the Chinese government would send a group of specialists to Mozambique next year to help establish the industrial park.

"Mozambican government has already identified a number of potential locations. With that defined, potential Chinese and Mozambican companies can be invited to the initial phase of the project," said the ambassador.

China is one of the major foreign investors in Mozambique and has been implementing a number of moves that tend to help Mozambique overcome the challenges it is going through in the economic domain.

Those moves include debt relief and loans with low or no interests as part of the Chinese and Mozambique strategy to strengthen cooperation.

CnbbeeE005004_20160924_NBMFN0A002_11n.jpg

Photo taken on Nov. 30, 2015 shows the Matchedje Motor Ltd. workshop, the only company assembling cars in Mozambique, which is as a result of a Chinese investment in Matola, the city adjacent to the capital city Maputo, Mozambique. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

CnbbeeE005004_20160924_NBMFN0A003_11n.jpg

Photo taken on Nov. 12, 2015 shows the newly-built national highway road No. 131 in Nampula city of the northern Nampula province, Mozambique, built by a Chinese company. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

CnbbeeE005004_20160924_NBMFN0A004_11n.jpg

Photo taken on Nov. 24, 2015 shows a five-star hotel that is being built by a Chinese company in the complex of the Joaquim Chissano Conference Center in Maputo, Mozambique. The hotel was launched in early 2014 by former Mozambican President Armando Guebuza. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

China to help Mozambique establish industrial park
 

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China to help Mozambique establish industrial park

Source: Xinhua | 2016-09-24 17:49:40 | Editor: huaxia

CnbbeeE005004_20160924_NBMFN0A001_11n.jpg

Chinese engineers go about their work at the Maputo-Catembe Bridge in Maputo, Mozambique, June 7, 2015. The Maputo-Catembe Bridge and its link roads, under loans of China EximBank, are likely to become one of the largest suspension bridges in Africa with a main span of 680 meters, leading to a substantial increase in economic, business and tourism development of the southern part of the bay after its completion in 2017. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

MAPUTO, Sept. 24 (Xinhua) -- China will help Mozambique establish an industrial park as an effort to increase job opportunities in the southern African country, according to Chinese Ambassador Su Jian.

Ambassador Su told Mozambican Prime Minister Carlos Agostinho do Rosario on Wednesday in Maputo that China is willing to continue supporting the country in different domains including increasing job opportunities through the establishment of an industrial park.

The ambassador said the Chinese government would send a group of specialists to Mozambique next year to help establish the industrial park.

"Mozambican government has already identified a number of potential locations. With that defined, potential Chinese and Mozambican companies can be invited to the initial phase of the project," said the ambassador.

China is one of the major foreign investors in Mozambique and has been implementing a number of moves that tend to help Mozambique overcome the challenges it is going through in the economic domain.

Those moves include debt relief and loans with low or no interests as part of the Chinese and Mozambique strategy to strengthen cooperation.

CnbbeeE005004_20160924_NBMFN0A002_11n.jpg

Photo taken on Nov. 30, 2015 shows the Matchedje Motor Ltd. workshop, the only company assembling cars in Mozambique, which is as a result of a Chinese investment in Matola, the city adjacent to the capital city Maputo, Mozambique. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

CnbbeeE005004_20160924_NBMFN0A003_11n.jpg

Photo taken on Nov. 12, 2015 shows the newly-built national highway road No. 131 in Nampula city of the northern Nampula province, Mozambique, built by a Chinese company. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

CnbbeeE005004_20160924_NBMFN0A004_11n.jpg

Photo taken on Nov. 24, 2015 shows a five-star hotel that is being built by a Chinese company in the complex of the Joaquim Chissano Conference Center in Maputo, Mozambique. The hotel was launched in early 2014 by former Mozambican President Armando Guebuza. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

China to help Mozambique establish industrial park
Hmmmm...what is China getting in exchange for this help...?
 

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MADAGASCAR OPENS UP NATIONAL PARKS IN BID TO BOOST ECO-TOURISM

By Robert Hackwill

22/09/2016

Target Madagascar continues this week in the south west of the island, in one of Madagascar’s 43 national nature reserves. It is a region of exceptional natural beauty, extraordinarily well-preserved.

Tsimanampetsotse park spreads over more than 200 000 hectares, the size of the Tokyo metropolitan area.

This park is one of the jewels in Madagascar’s biodiversity crown. In this one park there are 300 indigenous fauna and flora species. It also has the island’s only saltwater lake, one of the only places where pink flamingos come to nest.

It contains one of planet Earth’s oldest living things, the “grandmother” baobab, the oldest tree in the park. It has been scientifically dated at 1650 years old.

The idea is to protect this exceptional natural wealth and ensure that it lasts, and also to use it to attract investors. Plots of land in about 10 of Madagascar’s parks are to be released as concessions to develop eco-tourism and build eco-lodges. Three are to be built near a cave complex.

“We are not going to be building five-star palaces. We will build a sustainable, environmentally-friendly infrastructure using renewable energy and, for example, doing away with things like 24-hour air conditioning,” says Madagascar National Parks Marketing Director Alexandra Erick.

To stimulate activity in the park the team has come up with a big idea.

They are going to organise visits underground and take tourists cave-diving so they can discover fossils like giant lemurs and crocodiles.

The governing philosophy of Madagascar’s natural parks is joint management with the locals. They will be the ones who benefit the most from park activities. Last year this system raised 2.3 million euros of direct benefits for the local populations.

“Thanks to the investments jobs will be created along with local training schemes. This will increase Madagascar’s capacity to welcome tourists, with more rooms and beds, and so attract many more tourists,” says Erick.

The island wants to attract investors, but not at any price. All the investors we spoke to said they were investing in eco-tourism because they had fallen in love with the place, and its ethics.

“I think Madagascar needs investors who really love the county first and foremost, who are not looking for quick profits, but who realise that with development, the profits will eventually come,” says ecotourism investor Patrick Cejudo.

Eco tourism is one of the economic development levers Madagascar is pulling hard, but only on condition that the island’s fabulous biodiversity is not endangered.

Madagascar opens up national parks in bid to boost eco-tourism
 

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Solar-Panel-735x490.jpg


27 SEPTEMBER 2016


Liberia inks a MoU with Gigawatt Global

Liberia seals a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Gigawatt Global Cooperatief U.A for the financing and construction of a 10MW solar PV power plant in Monrovia.

In West Africa, the government of Liberia disclosed to have concluded the financing agreement with the multinational renewable energy company, Gigawatt Global.

According to local media the Liberian Observer, the signing took place last week at the permanent mission of Liberia to the United Nations in New York.

Social responsibility

Gigawatt Global is set to formulate a roadmap for the development of a solar PV plant in Liberia. RETWEET THIS QUOTE

It is reported that foreign affairs minister Marjon Kamara signed on behalf of the Liberian government, while the new projects coordinator, Remy Reinstein, signed on behalf of Gigawatt Global.

During the signing ceremony, Kamara is reported to have expressed satisfaction that the company has an element of corporate social responsibility attached to the project.

She said: "It's almost a must now that when you enter these kinds of contracts the company or enterprise does something for the community in which it operates. I'm very pleased that your business philosophy enables you to address other needs in your operational areas."

Commenting on the development, Reinstein stated that beside the deal of a 10MW to be launched, his company intends to install 30 additional megawatts in other parts of the country where government deems fit.

Gigawatt Global to formulate roadmap

Through the MoU, it is stipulated that Gigawatt Global will provide the government, through the Liberia Electricity Company (LEC), the roadmap, which summarises the main actions and steps necessary for the development and construction of a solar PV power plant.

The renewable energy company will also be expected to conduct at its own expense a technical and financial feasibility, including the analysis of financial cash flows and tariff structures and the average rate over the entire observation period of debt repayment and return on equity, media reported.

Furthermore, Gigawatt Global will provide all reports to the LEC within a period of eight months from the signing of this MoU; as well as provide 100% financing, both debt and equity as allowed under Liberian law.

On the other hand, the Liberian government will analyse reports and studies submitted by the developer for approval for the development and construction of the solar power plant within 30 days of developer's submission.

Lastly, the renewables company will also provide data upon request of the developer on the national electric grid, utility technical or financial information as requested in favour of the feasibility studies.

Liberia inks a MoU with Gigawatt Global
 

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Tanzania's economy grew 7.9 pct in second quarter: official data
Thu Sep 29, 2016 9:19am GMT

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DAR ES SALAAM (Reuters) - Tanzania's economy grew 7.9 percent in the second quarter of 2016, compared to 5.8 percent during the same time last year, the state-run National Bureau of Statistics said on Thursday.

"The growth of GDP in the second quarter was driven by mining, manufacturing and energy sectors," Albina Chuwa, the director general of the bureau, told a news conference.

"The increased production of natural gas has significantly boosted electricity generation in the country."

Tanzania's growth in the first quarter was 5.5 percent.

(Reporting by Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala; Editing by Katharine Houreld and Raissa Kasolowsky)

Tanzania's economy grew 7.9 pct in second quarter: official data | Reuters
 

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The Mayor of Mogadishu: what you get when African cliché is dropped

29 SEP 2016 09:14KEITH SOMERVILLE

0101
Mohamed Noor (left) and Huda Omar pose for a photograph during their wedding ceremony in Mogadishu, a picture at odds with the city’s reputation. Reuters/Feisal Omar


News reporting is always shaped by a considerable amount of tension. How do you strike the balance between hooking the audience with the sensational while supplying sufficient detail and context for an informed understanding of the events being reported?

This tension is most apparent when dealing with complex issues set in environments geographically distant from your audience. Reporting Africa to the world has been shaped by this tension. It has also been shaped by frames that can replicate colonial prejudices, Cold War stereotypes or project images of “otherness”.

This is captured in Africa’s Media Image in the 21st Century: From Heart of Darkness to Africa Rising, a new volume by Mel Bunce, Suzanne Franks and Chris Paterson.

In their fascinating and informative new study of Africa’s media image, the trio relate how journalists have to fight to get stories from Nigeria and other key states into the news as areas worthy of reporting in their own right and not just when there was “trouble” there.

They quote the Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie who says that if …

all I knew about Africa were from popular images, I too would think that Africa was a place of beautiful landscapes, beautiful animals, and incomprehensible people, fighting senseless wars, dying of poverty and AIDS, unable to speak for themselves and waiting to be saved by a kind, white foreigner.

Somalia is Black Hawk Down
If there is one country that could sum up this, it is Somalia. Decades of war, civil dislocation, poverty, hunger and disease have been the stock-in-trade of Western reporting. Given the country’s history this is not altogether surprising. It has been almost constantly at war since the uprisings in the late 1980s that overthrew the dictator Siad Barre.

The dictator’s departure led to the fragmentation of a highly centralised system of government, the growth of clan-based militias and the rise of Islamist movements. This in turn drew the hostility of neighbours and the US.

For many in the West reliant on sporadic but sensationalist media coverage, Somalia is Black Hawk Down. Added to that is a dash of piracy, stick-thin children starved by rapacious warlords and saved only by Western aid or intervention. Until, of course, that intervention went horribly wrong.

Harding’s grasp for the detail
There are elements of these themes but, fortunately, a lot more to be found in the intriguing new work,The Mayor of Mogadishu by Andrew Harding. There is detail, nuance, context and first-hand experience in this account by the well-travelled BBC foreign correspondent.

At times, it reads like a series of dispatches. While this may make it a little disjointed, it imbues the story with the sense of being there and knowing what is important to report or describe.

Harding is very well aware of the danger of stereotypes. He warns at the start that the name Mogadishu seems “forbidding” and has in the media

become a bloated cliché, not just of war but of famine and piracy, terrorism, warlords, anarchy, exodus … All the worst headlines of our time invoked by one lilting, gently poetic, four-syllable word.

Harding peoples the city and brings it alive as a place where lives are lived, ambitions followed, family dramas played out and stories told. As he points out, some stories are exaggerated for effect or to inflate the egos of the tellers or flatter their subjects. The central character is Mohamud “Tarzan” Nur – the Mayor of Mogadishu.

There are many and often conflicting stories of a man whose image to fellow Somalis is equally complex. He is hated or despised by some, loved and admired by others. Among his stories is the one about escaping a school dormitory to hang from the branches of a tree, earning himself the nickname Tarzan.

Mohamud Nur is a man of passion, of drive, of ruthlessness. His language is colourful and, in a passage where Harding comes perilously close to Somali stereotyping, can sound “like a gunfight in a sandstorm”.

Siad Barre gets off lightly
The author is surprisingly forgiving of the Somali dictator Siad Barre. He says that history has not been kind to him. Should it have been? A man who overthrew an elected government and switched sides in the Cold War to maximise his accumulation of weaponry. These weapons were used to pursue violent irredentist campaigns and to suppress brutally any vestige of opposition. On the pretext of ending clan conflict, this man used force and coercion against clans and their leaders. All these while single-mindedly pursuing advantage for his own Marehan clan, which is part of the wider Darod clan system.

The Marehan dominance eventually, as Harding does go on to describe, led to revolt and a high degree of polarisation back into clans by the majority that were excluded from power and influence.

Later in the book, clear analysis and context are more assured with the description of the US’s “coldly logical” but totally misinformed conclusions about the situation in Somalia. This led to US funding for warlords out of a 9/11 generated fear of the Somali Islamic Courts Union, which was succeeding in ending conflict and bringing stability to Mogadishu.

Washington encouraged Ethiopia’s invasion of Somalia and destruction of the Islamic Courts Union. This led to its militia, the Al Shabaab, becoming the dominant and destructive Islamist force it remains today.

The contemporary part of the story and continuing vicissitudes are again viewed through the eyes of Nur, his wife and friends. This gives a personal and very human touch to the whole narrative while not losing sight of complex national and international dimensions.

This ability to both tell stories with impact and grasp the impact of a multiplicity of factors emerges from the Bunce, Franks and Paterson volume as the key factor in getting the media to portray more accurate, informed and less stereotypical accounts of events in African states.

Keith Somerville, Visiting Professor, University of Kent

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
 

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Algeria Able to Become First Solar Power Supplier to Europe, Africa

1 OCTOBER 2016

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File photo. Photo: The Namibian

Algiers — Algeria has the necessary potential to become the world's first supplier of solar energy-based power to Europe and Africa, international expert affirmed Saturday in Algiers, calling for an Algeria-EU energy partnership to fund this transition recommended in the country's energy model.

Thanks to its thermic solar potential in the Sahara, which equals 10 times the global consumption, should further exploit this comparative advantage to become a major world producer of power, said Gille Bonafi, international consultant and expert at the Intergovernmental Committee of Experts (ICE) of the United Nations during a colloquium on energy transition in Africa.

Algeria, one of the largest solar fields in the world, records an insolation period ranging between 1,700 and 3,900 hours with a 5 KWH minimum received energy per m², the expert said, adding that in Europe, horizontal annual global solar irradiation ranges between 800 KWH/m² and 1,800 KWH/m² only.

"This is to say that Algeria has an extraordinary potential that allows it become the first world producer of solar-based power and supplier to Europe and Africa," he added.

As Algeria is Africa's first natural gas producer and has the 2nd gas reserves in Africa after Nigeria, "its key for the future" consists in the combination between solar and gas energies to produce electricity.

Algeria Able to Become First Solar Power Supplier to Europe, Africa
 

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China to help Mozambique establish industrial park

Source: Xinhua | 2016-09-24 17:49:40 | Editor: huaxia

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Chinese engineers go about their work at the Maputo-Catembe Bridge in Maputo, Mozambique, June 7, 2015. The Maputo-Catembe Bridge and its link roads, under loans of China EximBank, are likely to become one of the largest suspension bridges in Africa with a main span of 680 meters, leading to a substantial increase in economic, business and tourism development of the southern part of the bay after its completion in 2017. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

MAPUTO, Sept. 24 (Xinhua) -- China will help Mozambique establish an industrial park as an effort to increase job opportunities in the southern African country, according to Chinese Ambassador Su Jian.

Ambassador Su told Mozambican Prime Minister Carlos Agostinho do Rosario on Wednesday in Maputo that China is willing to continue supporting the country in different domains including increasing job opportunities through the establishment of an industrial park.

The ambassador said the Chinese government would send a group of specialists to Mozambique next year to help establish the industrial park.

"Mozambican government has already identified a number of potential locations. With that defined, potential Chinese and Mozambican companies can be invited to the initial phase of the project," said the ambassador.

China is one of the major foreign investors in Mozambique and has been implementing a number of moves that tend to help Mozambique overcome the challenges it is going through in the economic domain.

Those moves include debt relief and loans with low or no interests as part of the Chinese and Mozambique strategy to strengthen cooperation.

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Photo taken on Nov. 30, 2015 shows the Matchedje Motor Ltd. workshop, the only company assembling cars in Mozambique, which is as a result of a Chinese investment in Matola, the city adjacent to the capital city Maputo, Mozambique. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

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Photo taken on Nov. 12, 2015 shows the newly-built national highway road No. 131 in Nampula city of the northern Nampula province, Mozambique, built by a Chinese company. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

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Photo taken on Nov. 24, 2015 shows a five-star hotel that is being built by a Chinese company in the complex of the Joaquim Chissano Conference Center in Maputo, Mozambique. The hotel was launched in early 2014 by former Mozambican President Armando Guebuza. (Xinhua/Li Xiaopeng)

China to help Mozambique establish industrial park

Wasn't Mozambique in a debt crisis earlier this year? Is China bailing them out?
 
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