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Musings From Abroad

Implications for Africa as US President Biden drops re-election bid, endorses VP Harris

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United States President, Joseph Biden, has withdrawn from the race for re-election in the “interest of his party and country”

 

 

Biden, whose health state has been under intense scrutiny in recent weeks since the first presidential debate, has been under intense pressure to step down from both allies and the media.

 

“It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your President. And while it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term”, he tweeted on Sunday.

 

“For now, let me express my deepest gratitude to all those who have worked so hard to see me reelected. I want to thank Vice President Kamala Harris for being an extraordinary partner in all this work. And let me express my heartfelt appreciation to the American people for the faith and trust you have placed in me,” the statement read.

 

Biden’s withdrawal raises curiosity about US/Africa relations which his administration has been keen on solidifying after the legacy of his predecessor, Donald Trump, which was tainted by rhetorical disdain and hostility, as well as Washington’s obsession with dislodging China’s growing influence in Africa.

 

With Trump back in the race to return to the White House, his hardline anti-immigration stance and somewhat unprioritized Africa relations, it is yet to be seen what shape a US/Africa relation will take in the nearest future.

 

Biden endorsed his Vice,

Kamala Harris, who is of Jamaican and Asian descent. The US’ recent push for Africa might continue if she emerges as the candidate of the Democrats and eventually the President having been part of the Biden Administration and acting as the face of most of its initiatives in Africa with several visits across the continent, the most recent being a 9-day tour in 2023 when she visited Ghana, Zambia and Tanzania.

 

She must, however, cross the big “Trump hurdle” to emerge.

 

 

The 2024 United States presidential election will be the 60th quadrennial presidential election, taking place on Tuesday, November 5, 2024. Voters will elect a president and vice president for a four-year term.

Musings From Abroad

UN indicts warring parties in Sudan, calls for peacekeepers

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A United Nations-mandated panel stated on Friday that both sides in Sudan’s civil war had engaged in acts that may qualify as war crimes, and proposed that to protect civilians, international powers must expand the arms embargo and send in peacekeepers.

The report claimed to be based on 182 interviews with survivors, families, and witnesses. It detailed the rape, attacks, use of torture, and arbitrary arrests committed by Sudan’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) against civilians.

“The gravity of our findings and failure of the warring parties to protect civilians underscores the need for urgent and immediate intervention,” the U.N. fact-finding mission’s chair, Mohamed Chande Othman, told reporters.

Both parties have denied previous allegations by rights organisations and the United States and accused one another of abusing power. Neither stated in reaction to the allegations or answered enquiries for comment on Friday right away.

Othman and the other two mission members demanded the immediate deployment of an independent force.

“We cannot continue to have people dying before our eyes and do nothing about it,” mission member Mona Rishmawi said. A U.N.-mandated peacekeeping force was a possibility, she added.

The mission advocated for the extension of an arms embargo now in place by the United Nations, which only covers the western part of Darfur and the thousands of documented ethnic killings there. Fourteen of the eighteen states in the country have been affected by the conflict that began in Khartoum in April of last year.

 

According to the mission, there were also good reasons to suspect that the RSF and its affiliated militias had perpetrated other war crimes, including kidnapping women forcing them into prostitution and recruiting minors as fighters.

Unnamed support groups had received allegations of over 400 rapes in the first year of the war, but mission member Joy Ngozi Ezeilo said the actual number was likely considerably higher.

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Musings From Abroad

Chinese investments in Africa mutually beneficial, South Africa’s Ramaphosa insists

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South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa, said Thursday that Chinese investments in Africa were mutually beneficial and not a “debt trap” for the continent.

Ramaphosa stated this on the sidelines of a China-Africa meeting in Beijing, with delegations from over 50 African states.

“I don’t necessarily buy the notion that when China (invests), it is with the intention of, in the end, ensuring that those countries end up in a debt trap or a debt crisis,” Ramaphosa said when asked by reporters about China’s pledge at the summit of $51 billion in new funding for Africa.

China pledged to launch three times more infrastructure projects in resource-rich Africa, a region of significant geopolitical conflict between China, Europe, and the US, and to provide financial support over three years.

Ramaphosa also said, without providing details, that South Africa and China have secured an energy security pact. He claimed South Africa could learn energy sector reform from China.

“They already have done exactly what we are seeking to do. So there are lessons for us to learn from China and how to do it,” he said.

Power outages have slowed economic progress in South Africa in recent years. The country plans to pursue China’s largest electric vehicle producers, Ramaphosa added.

“We had good exchanges with BYD, which has shown a great interest to come and invest in South Africa,” he said.

Africa and China have strengthened commercial and political ties in recent decades. China is a major trading partner and lender. Additionally, Chinese companies invested heavily in Africa, making it a major investor in the continent.

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