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China vows ‘strategic cooperative partnership’ with Zambia 

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China has promised to assist Zambia in maintaining its interests in national security, economic growth, and sovereignty while encouraging more imports from the southern African country.

After meeting with Zambian President, Hakainde Hichilema on Friday in Beijing, Chinese President, Xi Jinping said that the two nations had upgraded their relations to a “comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership.” China, according to Xi, wants to cooperate further with Zambia in the areas of infrastructure, agriculture, mining, and clean energy.

Xi further confirmed that China was supporting more Chinese-funded businesses making investments in Zambia, and was promoting more high-quality Zambian products to enter the Chinese market.

Hichilema said at the meeting with Xi, “Zambia abides by the one-China principle, highly appreciates the guiding concepts and principles of Chinese-style modernisation, and hopes to learn from China’s development experience.”

China is Zambia’s largest creditor, with the Export-Import Bank of China owning around two-thirds of the $6.3 billion debt over which Zambia is negotiating a restructuring with its official creditors.

Zambia started making plans for a G20-structured debt restructuring after going into default on its sovereign debt in 2020. The disagreement over whether lenders should accept reductions has significantly hampered the framework’s progress, which hasn’t always been plain sailing.

China has substantial business interests in Zambia. Between 2014 and 2023, China invested in more than 30 projects through its Belt and Road Initiative. Chinese mining companies have also been invited by Zambia to continue actively taking part in mining cooperation.

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Nigeria received $1bn tax income from Shell in 2023

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Shell Nigeria, a multinational oil company, claims that through the operations of Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited and Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company of Nigeria Limited, it exclusively paid $1.09 billion in corporate taxes and royalties to the Nigerian government in 2023.

According to the numbers released in the recently released 2023 Shell Briefing Notes, SNEPCo remitted $649 million, while the SPDC paid $442 million.

Similar payments made by the two firms in 2022 totalled $1.36 billion, according to a statement from Abimbola Essien-Nelson, the company’s manager of media relations.

“These payments are Shell exclusive and do not include those made by our partners,” said SPDC Managing Director and Country Chair, Shell Companies in Nigeria, Osagie Okunbor.

Okunbor explained, “Shell companies in Nigeria will continue to contribute to the country’s economic growth through the revenue we generate and the employment opportunities we create by supporting the development of local businesses.”

He continued by saying that Shell has been an investor in Nigeria for more than 60 years and that the Briefing Notes provide an update on the state of the companies’ operations in Nigeria for 2023, including SPDC, SNEPCo, Shell Nigeria Gas, and Daystar Power.

He claimed that the studies demonstrated how the businesses kept driving advancement, collaborating closely with communities and stakeholders to support socio-economic growth and offer more affordable, environmentally friendly energy options.

“It is important to emphasise that Shell is not leaving Nigeria and will remain a major partner of the country’s energy sector through its deep-water and integrated gas businesses. Our collective focus remains on delivery of safe operations and care for our people,” Okunbor maintained.

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Zimbabwe’s new gold-backed currency now official unit of exchange

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Zimbabwe’s Treasury says that the newly introduced gold-backed currency is the official unit of exchange for transactions. It also stated on Tuesday that laws requiring businesses to utilize the official rate would be released soon.

The Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) has been stable on the official market since its inception in early April, but it has had a shaky start on the black market, where dealers are demanding a premium of 65% of the official rate to purchase dollars.

Additionally, some stores are charging customers who pay in the new currency—while the ZiG is being rejected by informal traders—a premium over the market rate, which is fixed at ZiG 13.6 per US dollar.

“To ensure orderly pricing, the Government will soon be introducing the necessary regulations to ensure that no exchange rate other than the official rate will be used for the pricing of all goods and services,” Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube said in a statement.

Since the ZiG’s inception, the government has been working to keep it afloat; this month, officials launched a campaign against unlicensed foreign exchange dealers.

Zimbabwe, located in southern Africa, abandoned the Zim dollar last month after it lost 70% of its value since the beginning of the year. This is the country’s fourth effort to introduce a local currency in ten years.

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