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AfDB bans Chinese road builder Chico over ‘fraudulent activity’ in Uganda

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China Henan International Corporation Group (Chico), a Chinese road builder, has been barred by the African Development Bank (AfDB) for participating in “fraudulent activity” in a project the institution is sponsoring in Uganda.

With effect from March 28, the Henan-based constructor Chico will be prohibited from participating in any new AfDB-funded projects throughout the continent, including its ongoing project in Kenya. The prohibition will remain for a full year.

In the course of submitting a bid for the procurement of civil works for upgrading of Rukungiri-Kihihi-Ishasha/Kanungu to bituminous standard, a component of the Road Sector Support Project in Uganda, the Chinese road builder “failed to disclose the use of a commission agent,” according to an AfDB investigation, the organization said.

The road project, which crosses both the eastern and southwestern regions of Uganda, is essential for “promoting regional integration and cross-border trade with the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Kenya,” according to the continental financier.

Chico has road projects supported by the World Bank, the AfDB, and local governments in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda; however, some of these projects have also been tarnished in different ways.

Chico withdrew from the Kisii-Isebania road project in southwest Kenya in 2022 when the African Development Bank (AfDB) sought payment of arrears totalling Ksh1.5 billion ($11.3 million).

A Kisii court filed charges against the corporation in 2019, alleging that it had fraudulently obtained soil valued at Ksh3.7 million ($27,907) from a farmer and forged lease agreements for property parcels.

Chico is building a 57-kilometre road in Tanzania that will connect the communities of Mkiwa-Itigi and Noranga in the Singida region, which is located in the country’s centre.

Recently, the African Development Bank (AfDB) has barred numerous corporations for allegedly engaging in fraudulent operations related to projects it sponsors.

Five businesses, including the Kenyan company Goldsun Investments, were barred from participating in bank-funded or associated projects last year after it was discovered that the company had committed misconduct during a tender for the dualling of the 84 km Kenol-Sagana-Marua highway in Central Kenya.

The Chinese contractor and any of its affiliates, including its executives and subsidiaries, “will not be eligible to participate in Bank Group-financed activities” after the one-year restriction ends.

“At the expiry of the debarment period, China Henan International Cooperation Group Company Limited will only be eligible to resume participation in African Development Bank Group-financed activities after it implements an integrity compliance program consistent with the Bank’s guidelines,” the lender said.

Musings From Abroad

France willing to pay for Morocco’s 3GW power line to Western Sahara

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Bruno Le Maire, the French finance minister, said on Friday that France was ready to help pay for a 3 gigawatt power line that would connect Casablanca, Morocco, to Dakhla, Western Sahara.

Morocco claims Western Sahara as part of its southern provinces, but the Polisario Front, which Algeria backs, wants it to be its separate state.

“I confirm to you that we are ready to participate in funding this project,” Le Maire told a Moroccan-French business forum in Rabat.

After a time of diplomatic frost, France’s foreign minister Stephane Sejourne said in February that France supported Morocco’s investments in Western Sahara and reiterated its support for Rabat’s plan to give the territory its government. This was the first sign that relations between the two countries were warming up again.

In the same way that the US and many other Arab and African countries have, Morocco wants France to recognize its full authority over Western Sahara. Le Maire said that France is also ready to work with Morocco to develop nuclear power, solar power, wind power, and green hydrogen.

Le Maire said that the French development agency AFD would lend 350 million euros to help Morocco’s OCP, a big company that makes phosphates and fertilizers, with its efforts to cut down on carbon emissions.

At 8.2 billion euros ($8.75 billion), France has the most money invested in Morocco by a foreign country until 2022. Anglo-American turned down BHP Group’s $39 billion takeover offer on Friday, saying it was way too low for the London-listed company and its future.

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Musings From Abroad

Nigeria loses $9.2 billion to foreign shipowners

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A group of maritime experts has revealed that Nigeria loses $9.2bn a year to foreign shipping lines that carry goods that the country’s fleet should be carrying.

Hassan Bello, who used to be the Chairman of the National Fleet Implementation Committee, said at the inauguration of the new leaders of the Shipowners Association of Nigeria in Lagos on Friday that the national fleet should be a private-sector project.

“$9.2bn lost annually to foreigners. This is trade that goes to foreign-owned shipping companies or carriers. You could imagine what that could do to our economy if we had a national fleet. The national fleet should be an initiative of the private sector but the government should encourage it,” Bello said.

Bello, who used to be the executive secretary of the Nigerian Shippers Council, said that all the money that was meant to come from Nigeria now goes to foreigners, giving them jobs. He said again how important it was for indigenous people to be able to trade with other countries.

“You know the significance of having indigenous participation in international trade. 90 per cent of international trade is done through the sea, carried by ships from one country to another.

“And we have been missing in action, that’s the whole problem. We need to be elusive, unequivocal, and deliberate in our efforts. And that is why it is important for this association. We will see it as one of the efforts to take us out of the dungeons,” he asserted.

A person who used to be the executive secretary of the Nigerian Shippers Council complained that Nigeria’s economy was based on exporting only one good, which was crude oil.

“We have to own and operate indigenous tonnage, purely private sector driven by providing incentives that are the function of a government, friendly operating climate, like tax holidays, and a wide range of very important incentives, which other countries have used. We have no time to do that. We are talking about tax holidays. We are talking about fiscal policies, legal, and the policy changes,” he stated.

Also, Dr. McGeorge Onyung, who was President of the SOAN right before he left, was upset that Nigeria wasn’t taking advantage of the $14tn ocean economy. Onyung, who is also the Managing Director of Jevkon Oil & Gas, said that when Nigeria brought materials and equipment from China for the Lagos-Calabar train line project, it made Chinese shipowners rich instead of keeping the freight money in Nigeria.

“The economy of this country would not improve if we don’t diversify into the ocean economy. The fact is very clear that without shipping, there is no shopping. If you don’t remember anything today, please remember that without shipping, there is no shopping.

“Now, we are building a railway from Lagos to Calabar. I don’t know how much that will cost. I don’t know how long it will take. But all the wagons and the rails must come from China, wherever, by sea. And it should be ships that should bring them in. So, we should start making the money before the railway is constructed,” he averred.

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