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Behind the News: All the backstories to our major news this week

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Over the past week, there were lots of important stories from around the African continent, and we served you some of the most topical ones.

Here is a rundown of the backstories of some of the biggest news stories in Africa that we covered during the week:

Will opposition coalition end the Bongos’ 56-year reign in Gabon?

Although there is wide condemnation of the recent coup wave in the West African sub-region, some civilian administrations in the continent also leave a bad taste to swallow with sit-tight leaders who have spent decades in the seat of political leadership. Form Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo who is in his 43-year reign, to Cameroon’s Paul Biya, in his 41st-year reign, amongst others across the continent, the sad examples.

But something worthy of attention is happening in Gabon ahead of its presidential election which will hold on August 25.

Opposition parties in the country have formed a coalition to end the 56-year dynasty of the Bongo family. According to the coalition, Alternance 2023, five of the 19 candidates on the ballot have consented to support the candidacy of former minister and university professor, Albert Ondo Ossa.

Ali’s father, Omar Bongo Ondimba started the dynasty when he came to power in 1967 after succeeding the country’s first president, Leon M’ba. He led Gabon for precisely 42 years and 175 days— at the time, the sixth-longest-ruling non-royal national leader since 1900. He died in office at age 72 in 2009 when current Bongo succeeded him.

During the last elections in 2016, President Bongo faced off against former Foreign Minister, Jean Ping, winning with a less than 2% margin of victory, and was declared winner by the electoral commission. Part of the fallout of the 2016 election was contention about the legal status of President Ali Bongo amidst reports that he is only an adopted son rather than a biological son of Omar Bongo, but Ali pulled through.

With 42 years for Bongo senior, Ali has been in charge so far for fourteen years which brings the total Bongo years to fifty-six. He has maintained his position as the leader of the oil-rich nation despite ailing health that has seen him in and out of hospitals outside the country.

Ondo Ossa, the opposition consensus candidate, remarked at a Libreville campaign event that the coalition “is going to fight with the means that the constitution offers us. We must have free and transparent elections.” But it is yet to be seen if the united force is formidable enough to unseat the age-long Bongos”.

Zambia, Vey & Associés in heated exchange over seized plane

On Tuesday, Zambia’s Drug Enforcement Commission (DEC) announced that it had seized a private jet awaiting take-off authorization at the Kenneth Kaunda International Airport in Lusaka. Authorities in Zambia detained the passengers on board. It was first reported that the plane was carrying $5.7 million in cash, 602 pieces of suspected gold bars, and five pistols with 126 rounds of ammunition.

However, Zambia’s Mines and Minerals Development Minister, Paul Kabuswe, on Wednesday, clarified that the contents of the plane were actually copper zinc, nickel and tin.

Two days after the arrest, a France-based law firm, Vey & Associés alleged that Zambia committed a major violation of its own constitution in the detention of the in-transit private aircraft, its crew and eight passengers.

Through its founding attorney, Antoine Vey, the firm “demanded the immediate release of the detainees to proper living conditions in a hotel pending the completion of the so-called investigation within a maximum of 48 hours, to be followed by unconditional approval for the aircraft and its passengers, with all their confiscated belongings”.

Zambia has one of the greatest mineral resource bases in all of Africa. It produces the eighth-most copper globally and is also rich in cobalt, gold, nickel, lead, silver, uranium, zinc, and various precious stones.

Zambia has adopted a mineral tracking system designed by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) to detect illicit trade practices that drain billions of dollars yearly from the copper-rich nation and its people. Yet, illegal activities in the mining sector have remained a challenge for the Zambian government.

All the facts surrounding the recent seizure are yet to unfold as the saga continues.

Nigeria’s Tobi Amusan is back, but doping concerns remain

The suspension of World and Commonwealth 100m hurdles record-holder, Nigeria’s Tobi Amusan, by the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) was lifted on Wednesday.

Amusan is the latest athlete from the country to be provisionally suspended by the AIU. She was provisionally suspended in July by the anti-doping unit of the World Athletics Federation after she missed three tests.

Amusan’s case was forwarded to a disciplinary tribunal, the AIU stated. The world champion was consequently left off the 26-person roster that the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) presented for the 2023 World Athletics Championships.

Despite her latest clearance, her initial suspension raises concern about increasing doping offences in the country, with three other Nigerian athletes suspended for doping offences in the last one year.

In February, the AIU announced an immediate suspension of Nigerian sprinter, Divine Oduduru, over anti-doping rule violation. Oduduru, who is Nigeria’s second-fastest runner ever, only behind the legendary Olusoji Fasuba, is also at risk of a six-year ban.

Nzubechi Grace Nwokocha, a member of the gold-winning relay team in the 2022 Commonwealth Games was given a provisional suspension by the team in September of that year for using illegal substances.

Another Nigerian athlete, Blessing Okagbare, who won silver in the long jump at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China, was given a ten-year doping suspension by the AIU in February 2022 for offences committed before the Tokyo Olympics in 2020.

Beyond the short-distance track and field stars dominated by Nigerians, East Africans— especially Kenyans and Ethiopians— who have dominated long-distance races for decades have also had athletes like 10 kilometres road race world record holder, Rhonex Kipruto, Betty Wilson Lempus and 800m specialist, Eglay Nalyanya amongst others who have had doping cases as recently as the last year, leaving a disturbing and damaging effect on the continent’s sporting image.

Germany finally takes bold stance against Nigerien junta

Reactions across the world have not stopped trailing the political situation in Niger Republic following a coup that led a presidential guard in July, which removed President Mohamed Bazoum from office.

One notable voice against the development which further underlines the international dimension and interests around the Niger coup saga came from Germany during the week. First, its development minister, Svenja Schulze regarded the latest episode of military intervention in the West African sub-region as “a setback that aggravates the complex development challenges in the country and in the Sahel further.”

Days later, German Foreign Minister, Annalena Baerbock revealed that her country now supported EU sanctions against the military junta in Niger. The foreign ministry said Baerbock had held talks with “the goal of re-establishing constitutional order” in Niger.

Baerbock held talks with African Union Chair, Moussa Faki Mahamat, U.S. Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, and other stakeholders about the coup in Niger.

Despite the seeming consensus stance of the West on the coup, the military juntas in Chad, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Guinea all appear to be supporting the Tchiani-led junta, which is the fifth coup culprit in three years in the West African sub-region.

Germany’s latest outburst is interesting as the Western European country has been silent in what has been reported by some as driven by the quest for Niger’s mineral resources. Others have pointed to its long-standing alliance with the West African country.

For many years, Germany has been a significant partner in Niger’s growth. Around one billion euros in development funds were distributed between 1962 and 2022, with food security, governance, education, health, migration management, and employment as priority areas.

Meanwhile, pressure for a return to civil government continues from the regional bloc, ECOWAS but the junta is yet to budge as it has embraced “isolationism” over diplomatic resolutions regarding the situation.

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Behind the News

Behind the News: All the backstories to our major news this week

Published

on

Over the past week, there were many important stories from around the African continent, and we served you some of the most topical ones.

Here is a rundown of the backstories to some of the biggest news stories in Africa that we covered during the week:

Different takes as African leaders spotlight multilateral loans

The call for a reform in the financial instrument of multilateral bodies like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World was at the front burner in the week as African leaders on Monday called for rich countries to commit to record contributions to a low-interest World Bank facility for developing nations. The leaders stressed that most African countries depend on the fund to sponsor development and combat climate change.

Kenya’s President William Ruto told a meeting of African leaders and the World Bank to discuss IDA funding, “call on our partners to meet us at this historic moment of solidarity and respond effectively by increasing their IDA contributions… to at least $120 billion.”

Ruto has been a notable voice in the call. Last year, during a session at the Paris Climate Summit, he called for a new global financial architecture outside the present creditor system which according to him tilts in favour of lenders like the IMF and the World Bank.

“We need a financial consumption tax at a global level that countries like Kenya pay, we do not want anything for free, we will pay more eventually because we have a bigger economy. We want those resources controlled not by IMF and World Bank because IMF and World Bank have the final say…,” Ruto said.

The World Bank has maintained that IDA lends money to 75 poor countries around the world at low-interest rates. More than half of these countries are in Africa. Governments use the money to improve access to healthcare and energy, put money into farms, and build important things like roads.

But Ugandan President, Yoweri Museveni, expressed a fresh perspective to the discourse at the same event as he urged African leaders to verify the true intentions of multilateral lending institutions towards the continent. He asked African leaders to “audit the intentions of the World Bank loans to ensure that they are for prosperity rather than profiteering”. He added: “What loans are we getting as Africa? Is the World Bank giving us loans for private sector-led growth or to be more dependent?”

“Our populations are increasing, but our economies are stunted. The International Development Association (IDA) should tell us why they are funding the modern slavery of Africans, and we should address issues like why Africa is producing what it does not consume and consuming what it does not produce”, the Ugandan leader stated.

Interventions by multilateral bodies have remained controversial in some cycles although the bodies have claimed that poverty reduction is one of their objectives, but some studies have shown that IMF borrower countries experience higher rates of poverty. A 2022 research by Glen Biglaiser and  Ronald J. McGauvran which investigated the effects of IMF loan conditions on poverty using a sample of 81 developing countries from 1986 to 2016,  found that IMF loan arrangements containing structural reforms contribute to more people getting trapped in the poverty cycle, as the reforms involve deep and comprehensive changes that tend to raise unemployment, lower government revenue, increase costs of basic services, and restructure tax collection, pensions, and social security programmes.

Liberia enacts war crimes court; who should follow? 

Liberia’s President Joseph Boakai has signed an executive order to establish a war crimes court. Boakai granted his final approval and congratulated the lawmakers for their effort in the legislation. A special court was eventually ordered to be established to try those who were deemed to be at fault by the Truth and Reconciliation Committee.

Many atrocities, such as rape, massacres, and the use of child soldiers, occurred during the wars that lasted from 1989 to 2003. In their fight against rebels affiliated with the Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD), government forces in Liberia have been accused of war crimes as well as grave violations of human rights, such as the widespread rape of women and girls, the summary execution of numerous civilians, and the looting and burning of entire villages.

Without warning or predetermined protocol, hundreds of civilians were allegedly arbitrarily and forcibly conscripted and deployed to fight on the front lines, frequently with little to no military training. The LURD troops have also been alleged to have committed grave crimes such as rape, forced recruitment of civilians, including child soldiers, and summary killings of suspected government collaborators.

Activists and civil society organizations that have demanded greater justice for crimes committed during the conflicts that claimed the lives of almost 250,000 people have praised the initiative. Some in Liberia are against its development, arguing that it could weaken the amnesty law that was already in place and cause old grievances to resurface. This helped put a stop to the violence.

Most African countries have a shared history of civil wars and internal crises that have made calls for special courts to try war popular in the continent.  Nigeria, Rwanda, Ethiopia, Sudan, Congo DR have recorded thousands of deaths of civilians occurring in separate conflicts of armed groups. Some of those killings are also categorized as war crimes and crimes against humanity, with most cases unsolved and consequential agitations in cases for self-determination and secession by aggrieved section of the state, which account for the volatile nature of most African states.

Liberia’s template which has birthed a special war crimes court might be a direction to follow in states with these experiences, first to afford victims closure through justice and likely deterrent for likely war crime offenders but much still lies on the political will of the state to ensure justice despite the special court.

Scrabble for Niger as US accuses Russia over military base incursion

Despite remaining under military reign and retaining consequent pariah status in the international community, West African country, Niger Republic, appears to remain a toast for world powers as the United States and Russia had their latest confrontation over the country during the week. Russian military personnel have reportedly made their way into an American military air base in Niger, according to a senior US defence official cited by Reuters. This move follows the junta in Niger’s decision to expel American personnel.

Until a coup last year, the country had been a vital ally for Washington’s fight against insurgents who had killed hundreds of people and displaced millions more. Mali, Libya, Chad, the Central African Republic, and other nations on the continent have looked to Russia for security cooperation. Russian paramilitary soldiers have now landed in Niger, isolating the United States and compelling its 1,100 military personnel to leave the country for the next few months.

America will lose access to a vital military facility it needs to combat terrorist organizations like ISIS as a result of Russia’s increasing influence in Niger. To strike terrorist bases in the area, intelligence gathered from the U.S. drone base in Niger is crucial. In what global politics observers have labelled a “failed strategy” Cameron Hudson, a former intelligence officer for Africa at the CIA, referring to countries with coup governments in Africa noted that “when all of these countries kicked out the French and turned inward, we then tried to pivot to become the peacemaker in the hopes that we could keep our presence there.” “All of that is not working. We are now out. Russia is now in.”

According to US law, Washington is not allowed to give money to coup regimes like the one in Niger. However, in an attempt to eventually restore military and other financial support, American leaders have made an effort to retain diplomatic ties with those nations, many of which have abundant natural resources.

A few African leaders have praised Moscow’s participation, arguing that in situations where the United States is unable to offer prompt security support, Moscow can. Some have resisted American efforts for reform, arguing that the West has no right to preach democracy in Africa when it ignores comparable problems with its friends elsewhere in the world.

On Africa and long-distance race at the Olympic 

Ahead of the 2024 Summer Olympic Games in Paris, France, Athletics Kenya named their six-man team on Wednesday. The team consists of three men and three women, with one reserve on each side. The team is led by Hellen Obiri, Benson Kipruto, and Eliud Kipchoge, the reigning champions. A “killer squad” the team has been called by sports enthusiasts giving the track record of the East African country at long-distance races. Kenyan and regional neighbours Ethiopian athletes have dominated the middle- and long-distance sports since the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. They have also shown a similar level of dominance in international cross-country and road racing competitions.

Benson Kipruto, the winner of the Tokyo Marathon, and Alexander Mutiso, the winner of the London Marathon, are both picked in the final Kenyan Olympic team. Timothy Kiplagat, the runner-up in Tokyo, will be backup in case any of the three chosen athletes are unable to compete. As she travels to Paris in fine form, having set a new women’s only world record last month by winning the London Marathon, Jepchirchir will have an opportunity to defend her championship with the final team list.

Their success has attracted significant attention on a global scale and has been the focus of social, sporting, and even scholarly studies. Genetic predisposition, development of high maximal oxygen consumption as a result of extensive walking and running at an early age, and comparatively high haemoglobin and hematocrit were some of the factors identified by Randall L. Wilber and Yannis Pitsiladis.

Developing a good metabolic “economy/efficiency” based on somatotype and lower limb characteristics, having an advantageous oxidative enzyme profile and skeletal-muscle-fiber composition, living and training at altitude, following a traditional Kenyan/Ethiopian diet, and having the drive to succeed economically are additional factors. However, although the variety of physiological and anatomical explanations appear tenable for the dominance, no definitive advantage has been found through research as athletes from other parts of the world like Asia and North America with little or no features peculiar to East Africa have had considerable success in long-distance also.

East Africa will continue counting its medals with pride while the search continues.

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Behind the News

Behind the News: All the backstories to our major news this week

Published

on

Over the past week, there were lots of important stories from around the African continent, and we served you some of the most topical ones.

Here is a rundown of the backstories to some of the biggest news in Africa that we covered during the week:

1. Renewed Hope: Tinubu’s regular sing-song and the sad reality of Nigeria

During the week in review, Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu was once again at his rhetorical best when he pronounced the all the tough policy decisions and reforms he has undertaken since coming into office almost a year are have been in the best interest of Nigerians and the good of the country.

Tinubu who spoke during a bilateral business session with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte at the Hague in the Netherlands, said every of his decisions were taken with the interest of his fellow citizens at heart.

He reiterated that his policies which have caused pains and anguish for Nigerians were in their best interest.

“I am a determined leader of my people. I am ever ready to take tough decisions in the best interest of the people, even if with initial pains,” Tinubu said.

“I have and will continue to take the difficult decisions that will benefit our people, even if there is short-term pain,” he added.

But beyond the regular promises of better days ahead by Tinubu and his team, the reality on ground in the country does not seem to align with so much optimism.

The first sign that things were going to be tough was when Tinubu pronounced the end of fuel subsidy in his inaugural address to the nation on May 29, 2023, without as much of a plan to ameliorate the anticipated economic crisis that was to follow.

Despite later attempts to provide some succour and buffers to cushion the effects of the subsidy removal, things have gone from bad to worse with the cost of living rising through the roof.

Inflation has gone up to an all time high of 30.20% according to the Nigeria Bureau of Statistics while prices of basic goods have gone beyond the reach of the average Nigerians, many who find it difficult to provide for their families.

But to President Tinubu, the pains and hardship Nigerians are currently going through will soon be a thing of the past because, according to him, his “tough policies” would yield positive results in the end.

“We have gone through the worst of the storms. I am unafraid of the consequences once I know that my actions are in the best long-term interests of all Nigerians,” he posited.

Nigerians are indeed waiting patiently for the fulfilment of these promises and are looking forward to a time they will go back to living a normal life again!

2. Discriminatory Chinese supermarket meets its match as Nigerian govt shuts mall

A Chinese supermarket located in the heart of Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, ran into hot water when the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), shut it down following allegations of discrimination against Nigerian shoppers.

Before the action of the government agency, a report had indicted that the supermarket located within the premises of the China General Chamber of Commerce in Abuja, was in the habit of barring Nigerian citizens from shopping in the mall.

Following the exposè which came with video evidence and investigations carried out by the FCCPC turned out to be true, officials of the agency promptly moved in and shut down the mall.

Director for Surveillance and Investigation of FCCPC, Boladale Adeyinka, who led the team, said they took the action was in response to a viral video showing Nigerians being discriminated against and not being able to get into an Abuja supermarket.

“The essence of the surveillance and investigation that we conducted today is to verify the allegations and the content of that viral video,” she told journalists during the exercise.

That was not the first time foreign business ventures have discriminated against Africans in their own country by refusing them their services.

A few years ago, a Chinese restaurant in Lagos was in the news for refusing to serve a Nigerian couple and it took the intervention of the state government for normalcy to return to the outfit after some Nigerian youth decided to vent their anger on the eatery.

Many Chinese, Lebanese and other companies run by foreigners in Nigeria have been found to discriminate against their Nigerian staff and customers but as usual, the powers that be have always turned a blind eye to such allegations, largely because the business owners have their plugs in the right places while the victims are always at the lower rung of the society.

3. Runaway Binance executive reportedly nabbed in Kenya

It was reportedly a bad day in the office for an executive director of global cryptocurrency firm, Binance Holdings Limited, Nadeem Anjarwalla, who had escaped from lawful detention in Nigeria, as he was arrested in Kenya.

Anjarwalla, a British-Kenyan citizen was arrested on arrival in Nigeria on February 26, along with another Binance official, Tigran Gambaryan, on allegations of tax evasion, money laundering and other charges.

But on March 22, Anjarwalla made an audacious escape from a guest house where he and Gambaryan were being held and was promptly declared wanted with the Nigerian authorities engaging the services of Interpol to help track him down.

The manhunt for Anjarwalla was ended when he was arrested in his hideout by a combination of Kenyan police and operatives of the Interpol.

The Kenya Police Service, in a statement confirming the arrest of the fugitive, said the fleeing Binance executive was arrested in “conjunction with the International Criminal Police Organisation (Interpol) and moves were being perfected for his extradition to Nigeria.

But beyond the arrest of Anjarwalla and the embarrassment it caused the country’s security agencies, a lot of questions have arisen from the episode.

Many Nigerians have continued to wonder how he managed to escape from the so-called safe house he and his colleague were being held.

How could Anjarwalla stage such an escape without the active connivance of some security officials who must have had their palms greased?

How did he manage to get a replacement passport to leave the country since his original passport had been seized by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission upon his arrest?

Questions, and more questions have continued to rise and Nigerians are waiting for answers, if they will come at all.

4. Zambian CSO blames media polarisation for biased reportage

The Executive Director of a Zambian civil society organisation, Chama Mwansa, has blamed the polarisation of the media for biased coverage and reportage in the country.

Mwansa who is the ED of the Chandarika Women and Youths Foundation, in an interview with Zambia Monitor, said the media was balkanized between private and state-owned media outlets which has led to a bias in news coverage.

“The media plays a crucial role in society. Media freedom allows for comprehensive coverage of various perspectives, whether from the opposition or the ruling party,” she said in the interview.

She also harped on the importance of media freedom, freedom of speech, and digital rights in promoting social and economic development, and emphasized on the importance of media partnerships in facilitating coverage of events.

Mwansa’s observations on the polarisation of the media industry in her country can also be replicated in many African countries where the media is gagged and practitioners are made to look like the dregs of the society.

In many African countries, journalists are seen as dangerous species with many of them treated with disdain. Many journalists in different parts of the continent have been abducted, brutalized and killed for just doing their jobs which have constantly raised the question on the safety and freedom of journalists.

5. Al Ahly, Esperance in clash of titans for CAF Champions League trophy

For the fourth straight seasons, two of Africa’s most successful clubsides, Al Ahly of Egypt and Esperance of Tunisia, will clash in the final of the TotalEnergies CAF Champions League scheduled for next month.

Al Ahly which is the current holders of the title and their long-standing rivals Esperance, booked their places in the final in dramatic fashions to earn their places in the final of Africa’s epic football tournament.

Al Ahly cruised past former champions TP Mazembe of the DRC 3-0 in their two-legged semi final tie, while Esperance defeated another former winner, Mamelodi Sundowns of South Africa, running out with a 2-0 aggregate victory.

Al Ahly, winners of the five of the last seven editions of the CAF Champions League, will be aiming for her 12 trophy when they visit Esperance for the first leg in Rades on May 18, while the Tunisian giants will be gunning for a fifth Champions League title, which clearly puts the two teams as the best in the continent.

The second leg will hold in Cairo a week later, which, on paper, gives Ahly a sense of home advantage.

  1. But however it turns out, there will surely be fireworks as the two teams battle for the glory in the two-legged final and surely, whichever team comes out tops will be the best for the African continent.

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